LLCPP bindings

Libraries

Given the library declaration:

library fuchsia.examples;

Protocol types are generated in the fuchsia_examples namespace. Domain objects for this library are generated in the fuchsia_examples::wire namespace, and test scaffolding is generated in the fidl::testing namespace.

Generated type names are transformed to follow the Google C++ style guide.

Constants

Constants are generated as a constexpr. For example, the following constants:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="consts" %}

Are generated in the header file as:

constexpr uint8_t kBoardSize = 9u;
extern const char[] kName;

The correspondence between FIDL primitive types and C++ types is outlined in built-in types. Instead of constexpr, strings are declared as an extern const char[] in the header file, and defined in a .cc file.

Fields

This section describes how the FIDL toolchain converts FIDL types to native types in LLCPP. These types can appear as members in an aggregate type or as parameters to a protocol method.

Built-in types

The FIDL types are converted to C++ types based on the following table:

FIDL TypeLLCPP Type
boolbool, (requires sizeof(bool) == 1)
int8int8_t
int16int16_t
int32int32_t
int64int64_t
uint8uint8_t
uint16uint16_t
uint32uint32_t
uint64uint64_t
float32float
float64double
array<T, N>fidl::Array<T, N>
vector<T>:Nfidl::VectorView<T>
stringfidl::StringView
client_end:Pfidl::ClientEnd<P>
server_end:Pfidl::ServerEnd<P>
zx.handlezx::handle
zx.handle:SThe corresponding zx type is used whenever possible. For example, zx::vmo or zx::channel.

Nullable built-in types do not have different generated types than their non-nullable counterparts in LLCPP, and are omitted from the table above.

User defined types

In LLCPP, a user defined type (bits, enum, constant, struct, union, or table) is referred to using the generated class or variable (see Type Definitions). The nullable version of a user defined type T is referred to using a fidl::ObjectView of the generated type except for unions, which simply use the generated type itself. Refer to the LLCPP memory guide for information about ObjectView.

Type definitions

Bits

Given the bits definition:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="bits" %}

The FIDL toolchain generates a FileMode class with a static member for each flag, as well as a kMask member that contains a mask of all bits members (in this example 0b111):

  • const static FileMode kRead
  • const static FileMode kWrite
  • const static FileMode kExecute
  • const static FileMode kMask

FileMode provides the following methods:

  • explicit constexpr FileMode(uint16_t): Constructs a value from an underlying primitive value, preserving any unknown bit members.
  • constexpr static cpp17::optional<FileMode> TryFrom(uint16_t value): Constructs an instance of the bits from an underlying primitive value if the value does not contain any unknown members, and returns cpp17::nullopt otherwise.
  • constexpr static FileMode TruncatingUnknown(uint16_t value): Constructs an instance of the bits from an underlying primitive value, clearing any unknown members.
  • Bitwise operators: Implementations for the |, |=, &, &=, ^, ^=, and ~ operators are provided, allowing bitwise operations on the bits like mode |= FileMode::kExecute.
  • Comparison operators == and !=.
  • Explicit conversion functions for uint16_t and bool.

If FileMode is flexible, it will have the following additional methods:

  • constexpr FileMode unknown_bits() const: Returns a bits value that contains only the unknown members from this bits value.
  • constexpr bool has_unknown_bits() const: Returns whether this value contains any unknown bits.

Note: When applying bitwise negation to bits values that contain unknown members, the resulting bits value is only defined for the known bits.

Example usage:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/llcpp/unittests/main.cc" region_tag="bits" adjust_indentation="auto" exclude_regexp="^TEST|^}" %}

Enums

Given the enum definition:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="enums" %}

The FIDL toolchain generates a C++ enum class using the specified underlying type, or uint32_t if none is specified:

enum class LocationType : uint32_t {
    kMuseum = 1u;
    kAirport = 2u;
    kRestaurant = 3u;
};

Example usage:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/llcpp/unittests/main.cc" region_tag="enums" adjust_indentation="auto" exclude_regexp="^TEST|^}" %}

Flexible enums

Flexible enums are implemented as a class instead of an enum class, with the following methods:

  • constexpr LocationType(): Default constructor, which initializes the enum to an unspecified unknown value.
  • constexpr LocationType(uint32_t value): Explicit constructor that takes in a value of the underlying type of the enum.
  • constexpr bool IsUnknown(): Returns whether the enum value is unknown.
  • constexpr static LocationType Unknown(): Returns an enum value that is guaranteed to be treated as unknown. If the enum has a member annotated with [Unknown], then the value of that member is returned. If there is no such member, then the underlying value of the returned enum member is unspecified.
  • explicit constexpr operator int32_t() const: Converts the enum back to its underlying value.

The generated class contains a static member for each enum member, which are guaranteed to match the members of the enum class in the equivalent strict enum:

  • const static LocationType kMuseum
  • const static LocationType kAirport
  • const static LocationType kRestaurant

Structs

Given the struct declaration:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="structs" %}

The FIDL toolchain generates an equivalent struct:

struct Color {
    uint32_t id = {};
    fidl::StringView name = {};
}

LLCPP does not currently support default values, and instead zero-initializes all fields of the struct.

Example usage:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/llcpp/unittests/main.cc" region_tag="structs" adjust_indentation="auto" exclude_regexp="^TEST|^}" %}

Unions

Given the union definition:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="unions" %}

FIDL will generate a JsonValue class. JsonValue contains a public tag enum class representing the possible variants:

enum class Tag : fidl_xunion_tag_t {
  kIntValue = 2,
  kStringValue = 3,
};

Each member of Tag has a value matching its ordinal specified in the union definition. Reserved fields do not have any generated code.

JsonValue provides the following methods:

  • JsonValue(): Default constructor. The constructed union is initially in an “absent” state until a variant is set. The WithFoo constructors should be preferred whenever possible.
  • ~JsonValue(): Destructor that clears the underlying union data.
  • JsonValue(JsonValue&&): Default move constructor.
  • JsonValue& operator=(JsonValue&&): Default move assignment
  • static JsonValue WithIntValue(fidl::ObjectView<int32>) and static JsonValue WithStringValue(fidl::ObjectView<fidl::StringView>): Static constructors that directly construct a specific variant of the union.
  • bool has_invalid_tag(): Returns true if the instance of JsonValue does not yet have a variant set. Calling this method without first setting the variant leads to an assertion error.
  • bool is_int_value() const and bool is_string_value() const: Each variant has an associated method to check whether an instance of JsonValue is of that variant
  • const int32_t& int_value() const and const fidl::StringView& string_value() const: Read-only accessor methods for each variant. Calling these methods without first setting the variant leads to an assertion error.
  • int32_t& int_value() and fidl::StringView& string_value(): Mutable accessor methods for each variant. These methods will fail if JsonValue does not have the specified variant set
  • Tag Which() const: returns the current tag of the JsonValue. Calling this method without first setting the variant leads to an assertion error.

Example usage:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/llcpp/unittests/main.cc" region_tag="unions" adjust_indentation="auto" exclude_regexp="^TEST|^}" %}

Flexible unions and unknown variants

Flexible unions have an extra variant in the generated Tag class:

  enum class Tag : fidl_xunion_tag_t {
    ... // other fields omitted
    kUnknown = ::std::numeric_limits<::fidl_union_tag_t>::max(),
  };

When a FIDL message containing a union with an unknown variant is decoded into JsonValue, JsonValue::Which() will return JsonValue::Tag::kUnknown.

The LLCPP bindings do not store the raw bytes and handles of unknown variants.

Encoding a union with an unknown variant is not supported and will cause an encoding failure.

Tables

Given the table definition:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="tables" %}

The FIDL toolchain generates a User class with the following methods:

  • User(): Default constructor, initializes an empty table with no fields set.
  • User::Builder(fidl::AnyArena& arena): Builder factory. Returns a fidl::WireTableBuilder<User> that allocates the frame and members from the supplied arena.
  • User::ExternalBuilder(fidl::ObjectView<fidl::WireTableFrame<User>> frame): External builder factory. Returns a fidl::WireTableExternalBuilder<User> with the supplied frame. This builder requires careful, memory management but might occasionally be useful. Caveat Emptor.
  • User(User&&): Default move constructor.
  • ~User(): Default destructor.
  • User& operator=(User&&): Default move assignment.
  • bool IsEmpty() const: Returns true if no fields are set.
  • bool has_age() const and bool has_name() const: Returns whether a field is set.
  • const uint8_t& age() const and const fidl::StringView& name() const: Read-only field accessor methods. Calling these methods without first setting the field leads to an assertion error.

In order to build a table, three additional class is generated: fidl::WireTableBuilder<User>, fidl::WireTableExternalBuilder<User> and fidl::WireTableFrame<User>.

fidl::WireTableFrame<User> is a container for the table's internal storage, and is allocated separately from the builder because LLCPP maintains the object layout of the underlying wire format. It is only use internally by builders.

fidl::WireTableFrame<User> has the following methods:

  • WireTableFrame(): Default constructor.

fidl::WireTableExternalBuilder<User> has the following methods:

  • fidl::WireTableExternalBuilder<User> age(uint8_t): set age by inlining it into the table frame.
  • fidl::WireTableExternalBuilder<User> name(fidl::ObjectView<fidl::StringView>): set name with an already allocated value.
  • User Build(): build and return the table object. After Build() is called the builder must be discarded.

fidl::WireTableBuilder<User> has all of the methods of fidl::WireTableExternalBuilder<User> (but with the right return type from the setters) and adds:

  • fidl::WireTableBuilder<User> name(std::string_view): set name by allocating a new fidl::StringView from the builder's arena and copying the supplied string into it.

Example usage:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/llcpp/unittests/main.cc" region_tag="tables" adjust_indentation="auto" exclude_regexp="^TEST|^}" %}

In addition to assigning fields with fidl::ObjectView, any of the allocation strategies described in the tutorial can also be used.

Note: Tables with unknown fields will decode successfully but will fail to encode.

Inline layouts

The generated C++ code uses the the name reserved by fidlc for inline layouts.

LLCPP also generates scoped names to refer to any inline layouts that were defined directly within a parent layout in FIDL. For example, for the FIDL:

type Outer = struct {
  inner struct {};
};

The inner struct can be referred to using its globally unique name Inner as well as the scoped name Outer::Inner. This can be useful when the top level name is overridden using the @generated_name attribute, for example in:

type Outer = struct {
  inner
  @generated_name("SomeCustomName") struct {};
};

the inner struct can be referred to as SomeCustomName or Outer::Inner.

Another example of this is the protocol result types: the success and error variants of a type such as TicTacToe_MakeMove_Result can be referenced as TicTacToe_MakeMove_Result::Response and TicTacToe_MakeMove_Result::Err, respectively.

Protocols

Given the protocol:

{% includecode gerrit_repo="fuchsia/fuchsia" gerrit_path="examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples/types.test.fidl" region_tag="protocols" %}

Note: The MakeMove method above returns a bool representing success, and a nullable response value. This is considered un-idiomatic, you should use an error type instead.

FIDL will generate a TicTacToe class, which acts as an entry point for types and classes that both clients and servers will use to interact with this service. The members of this class are described in individual subsections in the rest of this section.

Typed channel endpoints

LLCPP sends and receives FIDL protocol messages over the Zircon channel transport, which carry arbitrary blobs of bytes and handles. Rather than exposing raw endpoints, for instance zx::channel, the API exposes three templated endpoint classes:

  • fidl::ClientEnd<TicTacToe>: the client endpoint of the TicTacToe protocol; it owns a zx::channel. Client bindings that require exclusive ownership of the channel would consume this type. For example, a fidl::WireClient<TicTacToe> may be constructed from a fidl::ClientEnd<TicTacToe>, also known as “binding the channel to the message dispatcher”.
  • fidl::UnownedClientEnd<TicTacToe>: an unowned value borrowing some client endpoint of the TicTacToe protocol. Client APIs that do not require exclusive ownership of the channel would take this type. An UnownedClientEnd may be derived from a ClientEnd of the same protocol type by calling borrow(). The borrowed-from endpoint may be std::move-ed within the same process, but cannot be dropped or transferred out-of-process, while there are unowned borrows to it.
  • fidl::ServerEnd<TicTacToe>: the server endpoint of the TicTacToe protocol; it owns a zx::channel. Server bindings that require exclusive ownership of the channel would consume this type. For example, a fidl::ServerEnd<TicTacToe> may be provided to fidl::BindServer<TicTacToe> among other parameters to create a server binding.

There is no UnownedServerEnd as it is not yet needed to safely implement the current set of features.

A pair of client and server endpoint may be created using the ::fidl::CreateEndpoints<TicTacToe> library call. In a protocol request pipelining scenario, one can immediately start performing operations on the client endpoint after std::move()-ing the server endpoint to the remote server.

See the class documentation on these types for more details.

Request and response structs

FIDL generates a type for each request, response, and event in the protocol by treating the parameters as struct fields. For example, the MakeMoveRequest is generated as if it were a struct with two fields: uint8 row, and uint8 col, providing the same generated code API as regular structs:

struct MakeMoveRequest final {
    uint8_t row;
    uint8_t col;
}

For this example, the following types are generated:

  • fidl::WireRequest<TicTacToe::StartGame>
  • fidl::WireRequest<TicTacToe::MakeMove>
  • fidl::WireResponse<TicTacToe::MakeMove>
  • fidl::WireEvent<TicTacToe::OnOpponentMove>

The naming scheme for requests is [Method]Request. The naming scheme for responses is [Method]Response. The naming scheme for events is [Method]Event.

Any empty request, response, or event is represented by a nullptr.

Client

The LLCPP bindings provides multiple ways to interact with a FIDL protocol as a client:

  • fidl::WireClient<TicTacToe>: This class exposes thread-safe APIs for outgoing asynchronous and synchronous calls as well as asynchronous event handling. It owns the client end of the channel. An async_dispatcher_t* is required to support the asynchronous APIs as well as event and error handling. It must be used with a single-threaded dispatcher. Objects of this class must be bound to the client endpoint and destroyed on the same thread that is running the dispatcher. This is the recommended variant for most use cases, except for those where an async_dispatcher_t cannot be used or when the client needs to be moved between threads.
  • fidl::WireSharedClient<TicTacToe>: This class has less opinions on threading models compared to WireClient, but requires a two-phase shutdown pattern to prevent use-after-frees. Objects of this class may be destroyed on an arbitrary thread. It also supports use with a multi-threaded dispatcher. For more details, see LLCPP threading guide.
  • fidl::WireSyncClient<TicTacToe>: This class exposes purely synchronous APIs for outgoing calls as well as for event handling. It owns the client end of the channel.
  • fidl::WireCall<TicTacToe>: This class is identical to WireSyncClient except that it does not have ownership of the client end of the channel. WireCall may be preferable to WireSyncClient when migrating code from the C bindings to the LLCPP bindings, or when implementing C APIs that take raw zx_handle_ts.

WireClient

fidl::WireClient is thread-safe and supports both synchronous and asynchronous calls as well as asynchronous event handling.

Creation

A client is created with a client-end fidl::ClientEnd<P> to the protocol P, an async_dispatcher_t*, and an optional pointer to an WireAsyncEventHandler that defines the methods to be called when a FIDL event is received or when the client is unbound. If the virtual method for a particular event is not overridden, the event is ignored.

class EventHandler : public fidl::WireAsyncEventHandler<TicTacToe> {
 public:
  EventHandler() = default;

  void OnOpponentMove(fidl::WireEvent<OnOpponentMove>* event) override {
    /* ... */
  }

  void on_fidl_error(fidl::UnbindInfo unbind_info) override { /* ... */ }
};

fidl::ClientEnd<TicTacToe> client_end = /* logic to connect to the protocol */;
EventHandler event_handler;
fidl::WireClient<TicTacToe> client;
client.Bind(std::move(client_end), dispatcher, &event_handler);

The binding may be torn down automatically in case of the server-end being closed or due to an invalid message being received from the server. You may also actively tear down the bindings by destroying the client object.

Outgoing FIDL methods

You can invoke outgoing FIDL APIs through the fidl::WireClient instance. Dereferencing a fidl::WireClient provides access to the following methods:

  • For StartGame (fire and forget):

    • fidl::Status StartGame(bool start_first): Managed variant of a fire and forget method.
  • For MakeMove (two way):

    • [...] MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col): Managed variant of an asynchronous two way method. It returns an internal type that must be used to register the asynchronous continuation for receiving the result, such as a callback. See specifying asynchronous continuation. The continuation will be executed on a dispatcher thread unless the dispatcher is shutting down.

fidl::WireClient::buffer provides access to the following methods:

  • fidl::Status StartGame(bool start_first): Caller-allocated variant of a fire and forget method.
  • [...] MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col): Asynchronous, caller-allocated variant of a two way method. It returns the same internal type as that from the managed variant.

fidl::WireClient::sync provides access to the following methods:

  • fidl::WireResult<MakeMove> MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col): Synchronous, managed variant of a two way method. The same method exists on WireSyncClient.
Specifying asynchronous continuation

See the corresponding C++ documentation comments.

The continuation is called with a result object either representing a successfully decoded response or an error. This is useful when the user needs to propagate errors for each FIDL call to their originators. For example, a server may need to make another FIDL call while handling an existing FIDL call, and need to fail the original call in case of errors.

The are a few methods on the returned object from a two way call:

  • Then: takes a callback, and invokes the callback at most once until the client goes away.

  • ThenExactlyOnce: when passed a callback, the callback is executed exactly once, either when the call succeeds or fails. However, because the callbacks are invoked asynchronously, be ware of use-after-free bugs when destroying a client: the objects captured by the callback may not be valid.

  • ThenExactlyOnce may also take a response context when control over allocation is desired. TicTacToe has only one response context, fidl::WireResponseContext<TicTacToe::MakeMove>, which has pure virtual methods that should be overridden to handle the result of the call:

virtual void OnResult(fidl::WireUnownedResult<MakeMove>& result) = 0;

OnResult is called with a result object either representing a successfully decoded response or an error. You are responsible for ensuring that the response context object outlives the duration of the entire async call, since the fidl::WireClient borrows the context object by address to avoid implicit allocation.

Centralized error handler

When the binding is torn down due to an error, fidl::WireAsyncEventHandler<TicTacToe>::on_fidl_error will be invoked from the dispatcher thread with the detailed reason. When the error is dispatcher shutdown, on_fidl_error will be invoked from the thread that is calling dispatcher shutdown. It is recommended to put any central logic for logging or releasing resources in that handler.

WireSyncClient

fidl::WireSyncClient<TicTacToe> is a synchronous client which provides the following methods:

  • explicit WireSyncClient(fidl::ClientEnd<TicTacToe>): Constructor.
  • ~WireSyncClient(): Default destructor.
  • WireSyncClient(&&): Default move constructor.
  • WireSyncClient& operator=(WireSyncClient&&): Default move assignment.
  • const fidl::ClientEnd<TicTacToe>& client_end() const: Returns the underlying client endpoint.
  • fidl::Status StartGame(bool start_first): Managed variant of a fire and forget method call. Buffer allocation for requests are entirely handled within this function.
  • fidl::WireResult<TicTacToe::MakeMove> MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col): Managed variant of a two way method call, which takes the parameters as arguments and returns a WireResult object. Buffer allocation for requests and responses are entirely handled within this function. The bindings calculate a safe buffer size specific to this call at compile time based on FIDL wire-format and maximum length constraints. The buffers are allocated on the stack if they fit under 512 bytes, or else on the heap. See WireResult for details on buffer management.
  • fidl::Status HandleOneEvent(SyncEventHandler& event_handler): Blocks to consume exactly one event from the channel. See Events.

fidl::WireSyncClient<TicTacToe>::buffer provides the following methods:

  • fidl::WireUnownedResult<TicTacToe::StartGame> StartGame(bool start_first): Caller-allocated variant of a fire and forget call, which takes in backing storage for the request buffer passed as the argument to buffer, as well as request parameters, and returns an fidl::WireUnownedResult.

  • fidl::WireUnownedResult<TicTacToe::MakeMove> MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col): Caller-allocated variant of a two way method, which requests both the space for encoding the request and the space for receiving the response from the same memory resource that is passed to the buffer method.

Note that each method has both an owned and caller-allocated variant. In brief, the owned variant of each method handles memory allocation for requests and responses, whereas the caller-allocated variant allows the user to provide the buffer themselves. The owned variant is easier to use, but may result in extra allocation.

WireCall

fidl::WireCall<TicTacToe> provides similar methods to those found in WireSyncClient, with the only difference being that WireCall can be constructed with a fidl::UnownedClientEnd<TicTacToe> i.e. it borrows the client endpoint:

  • fidl::WireResult<StartGame> StartGame(bool start_first): Owned variant of StartGame.
  • fidl::WireResult<MakeMove> MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col): Owned variant of MakeMove.

fidl::WireCall<TicTacToe>(client_end).buffer provides the following methods:

  • fidl::WireUnownedResult<StartGame> StartGame(bool start_first): Caller-allocated variant of StartGame.
  • fidl::WireUnownedResult<MakeMove> MakeMove(uint8_t row, uint8_t col);: Caller-allocated variant of MakeMove.

Result, WireResult, and WireUnownedResult

The managed variants of each method of WireSyncClient and WireCall all return a fidl::WireResult<Method> type, whereas the caller-allocating variants all return an fidl::WireUnownedResult<Method>. Fire and forget methods on fidl::WireClient return a fidl::Status. These types define the same set of methods:

  • zx_status status() const returns the transport status. it returns the first error encountered during (if applicable) linearizing, encoding, making a call on the underlying channel, and decoding the result. If the status is ZX_OK, the call has succeeded, and vice versa.
  • fidl::Reason reason() const returns details about which operation failed, when status() is not ZX_OK. For example, if encoding failed, reason() will return fidl::Reason::kEncodeError. reason() should not be called when status is ZX_OK.
  • const char* error_message() const contains a brief error message when status is not ZX_OK. Otherwise, returns nullptr.
  • (only for WireResult and WireUnownedResult for two-way calls) T* Unwrap() returns a pointer to the response struct. For WireResult, the pointer points to memory owned by the result object. For WireUnownedResult, the pointer points to the caller-provided buffer. Unwrap() should only be called when the status is ZX_OK.

Additionally, WireResult and WireUnownedResult for two-way calls will implement dereference operators that return the response struct itself. This allows code such as:

fidl::WireResult result = client.sync()->MakeMove(0, 0);
auto* response = result.Unwrap();
bool success = response->success;

To be simplified to:

fidl::WireResult result = client.sync()->MakeMove(0, 0);
bool success = result->success;

WireResult<Method> manages ownership of all buffer and handles, while ::Unwrap() returns a view over it. Therefore, this object must outlive any references to the unwrapped response.

Allocation strategy And move semantics

WireResult stores the response buffer inline if the message is guaranteed to fit under 512 bytes. Since the result object is usually instantiated on the caller's stack, this effectively means the response is stack-allocated when it is reasonably small. If the maximal response size exceeds 512 bytes, WireResult instead contains a heap-allocated buffer.

Therefore, std::move() on WireResult is not supported. The content has to be copied if the buffer is inline, and pointers to out-of-line objects have to be updated to locations within the destination object, these are surprising overheads for a move operation that is commonly understood to be low cost.

If the result object need to be passed around multiple function calls, consider pre-allocating a buffer in the outer-most function and use the caller-allocating flavor.

Server

Implementing a server for a FIDL protocol involves providing a concrete implementation of TicTacToe.

The generated fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe> class has pure virtual methods corresponding to the method calls defined in the FIDL protocol. Users implement a TicTacToe server by providing a concrete implementation of fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe>, which has the following pure virtual methods:

  • virtual void StartGame(StartGameRequestView request, StartGameCompleter::Sync& completer)
  • virtual void MakeMove(MakeMoveRequestView request, MakeMoveCompleter::Sync& completer)

Refer to the example LLCPP server for how to bind and set up a server implementation.

The LLCPP bindings also provide functions for manually dispatching a message given an implementation, fidl::WireDispatch<TicTacToe>:

  • void fidl::WireDispatch<TicTacToe>(fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe>* impl, fidl::IncomingMessage&& msg, ::fidl::Transaction* txn): Dispatches the incoming message. If there is no matching handler, it closes all handles in the message and notifies txn of an error.

Requests

The request is provided as the first argument of each generated FIDL method handler. This a view of the request (a pointer). All the request arguments are accessed using the arrow operator and the argument name.

For example:

  • request->start_first
  • request->row

See LLCPP memory guide for notes on request lifetime.

Completers

A completer is provided as the last argument of each generated FIDL method handler, after all the FIDL request parameters for that method. The completer classes capture the various ways one can complete a FIDL transaction, e.g. by sending a reply, closing the channel with an epitaph, etc, and come in both synchronous and asynchronous versions (though the ::Sync class is provided as an argument by default). In this example, this completers are:

  • fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe>::StartGameCompleter::Sync
  • fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe>::StartGameCompleter::Async
  • fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe>::MakeMoveCompleter::Sync
  • fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe>::MakeMoveCompleter::Async

All completer classes provide the following methods:

  • void Close(zx_status_t status): Close the channel and send status as the epitaph.

In addition, two way methods will provide two versions of a Reply method for replying to a response: a managed variant and a caller-allocating variant. These correspond to the variants present in the client API. For example, both MakeMoveCompleter::Sync and MakeMoveCompleter::Async provide the following Reply methods:

  • ::fidl::Status Reply(bool success, fidl::ObjectView<GameState> new_state)
  • ::fidl::Status Reply(fidl::BufferSpan _buffer, bool success, fidl::ObjectView<GameState> new_state)

Because the status returned by Reply is identical to the unbinding status, it can be safely ignored.

Finally, sync completers for two way methods can be converted to an async completer using the ToAsync() method. Async completers can out-live the scope of the handler by e.g. moving it into a lambda capture (see LLCPP tutorial for example usage), allowing the server to respond to requests asynchronously. The async completer has the same methods for responding to the client as the sync completer.

Note: Each Completer object must only be accessed by one thread at a time. Simultaneous access from multiple threads will result in a crash.

Parallel message handling

By default, messages from a single binding are handled sequentially, i.e. a single thread attached to the dispatcher (run loop) is woken up if necessary, reads the message, executes the handler, and returns back to the dispatcher. The ::Sync completer provides an additional API, EnableNextDispatch(), which may be used to selectively break this restriction. Specifically, a call to this API will enable another thread waiting on the dispatcher to handle the next message on the binding while the first thread is still in the handler. Note that repeated calls to EnableNextDispatch() on the same Completer are idempotent.

Note: This use-case is currently possible only using the lib/fidl bindings.

void DirectedScan(int16_t heading, ScanForPlanetsCompleter::Sync& completer) override {
  // Suppose directed scans can be done in parallel. It would be suboptimal to block one scan until
  // another has completed.
  completer.EnableNextDispatch();
  fidl::VectorView<Planet> discovered_planets = /* perform a directed planet scan */;
  completer.Reply(std::move(discovered_planets));
}

Caller-allocated methods

A number of the APIs above provide owned and caller-allocated variants of generated methods.

The caller-allocated variant defers all memory allocation responsibilities to the caller. The type fidl::BufferSpan references a buffer address and size. It will be used by the bindings library to construct the FIDL request, hence it must be sufficiently large. The method parameters (e.g. heading) are linearized to appropriate locations within the buffer. There are a number of ways to create the buffer:

// 1. On the stack
using StartGame = TicTacToe::StartGame;
fidl::SyncClientBuffer<StartGame> buffer;
auto result = client.buffer(buffer.view())->StartGame(true);

// 2. On the heap
auto buffer = std::make_unique<fidl::SyncClientBuffer<StartGame>>();
auto result = client.buffer(buffer->view())->StartGame(true);

// 3. Some other means, e.g. thread-local storage
constexpr uint32_t buffer_size = fidl::SyncClientMethodBufferSizeInChannel<StartGame>();
uint8_t* buffer = allocate_buffer_of_size(buffer_size);
fidl::BufferSpan buffer_span(/* data = */buffer, /* capacity = */request_size);
auto result = client.buffer(buffer_span)->StartGame(true);

// Check the transport status (encoding error, channel writing error, etc.)
if (result.status() != ZX_OK) {
  // Handle error...
}

// Don't forget to free the buffer at the end if approach #3 was used...

When the caller-allocating flavor is used, the result object borrows the request and response buffers (hence its type is under WireUnownedResult). Make sure the buffers outlive the result object. See WireUnownedResult.

Note: buffers passed to the bindings must be aligned to 8 bytes. The fidl::SyncClientBuffer helper class does this automatically. For an asynchronous client, use fidl::AsyncClientBuffer. Failure to align would result in a run-time error.

Events

In LLCPP, events can be handled asynchronously or synchronously, depending on the type of client being used.

Async client

When using a fidl::WireClient, events can be handled asynchronously by passing the class a fidl::WireAsyncEventHandler<TicTacToe>*. The WireAsyncEventHandler class has the following members:

  • virtual void OnOpponentMove(fidl::WireEvent<OnOpponentMove>* event) {}: handler for the OnOpponentMove event (one method per event).

  • virtual on_fidl_error(::fidl::UnbindInfo info) {}: method called when the client encounters a terminal error.

To be able to handle events and errors, a class that inherits from fidl::WireAsyncEventHandler<TicTacToe> must be defined.

Sync client

In WireSyncClient, events are handled synchronously by calling a HandleOneEvent function and passing it a fidl::WireSyncEventHandler<TicTacToe>.

WireSyncEventHandler is a class that contains a pure virtual method for each event. In this example, it consists of the following member:

  • virtual void OnOpponentMove(fidl::WireEvent<TicTacToe::OnOpponentMove>* event) = 0: The handle for the OnOpponentMove event.

To be able to handle events, a class that inherits from WireSyncEventHandler must be defined. This class must define the virtual methods for all the events in the protocol. Then an instance of this class must be created.

There are two ways to handle one event. Each one use an instance of the user defined event handler class:

  • ::fidl::Status fidl::WireSyncClient<TicTacToe>::HandleOneEvent( SyncEventHandler& event_handler): A bound version for sync clients.
  • ::fidl::Status fidl::WireSyncEventHandler<TicTacToe>::HandleOneEvent( fidl::UnownedClientEnd<TicTacToe> client_end): An unbound version that uses an fidl::UnownedClientEnd<TicTacToe> to handle one event for a specific handler.

For each call to HandleOneEvent, the method waits on the channel for exactly one incoming message. Then the message is decoded. If the result is fidl::Status::Ok() then exactly one virtual method has been called. Otherwise, no virtual method has been called and the status indicates the error.

If the handlers are always the same (from one call to HandleOneEvent to the other), the WireSyncEventHandler object should be constructed once and used each time you need to call HandleOneEvent.

If an event is marked as transitional, then a default implementation is provided, which causes HandleOneEvent to return an error upon receiving a transitional event that is not handled by the user.

Server

fidl::WireSendEvent is used to send events from the server side. There are two overloads:

  • fidl::WireSendEvent(const fidl::ServerBindingRef<Protocol>& binding_ref) to send events over a server binding reference.
  • fidl::WireSendEvent(const fidl::ServerEnd<Protocol>& endpoint) to send events over an endpoint.
Sending events using a server binding object

When binding a server implementation to a channel, fidl::BindServer returns a fidl::ServerBindingRef<Protocol>, which is the means by which you may interact safely with a server binding.

Calling fidl::WireSendEvent with a binding reference returns an interface to send events.

The event sender interface contains methods for sending each event. As a concrete example, the event sender interface for TicTacToe provides the following methods:

  • fidl::Status OnOpponentMove(GameState new_state): Managed flavor.

Calling .buffer(...) returns a similar interface for the caller-allocating flavor, allocating encoding buffers from the memory resource passed to .buffer, analogous to the client API as well as the server completers.

Sending events with a ServerEnd object

A server endpoint by itself is represented by fidl::ServerEnd<Protocol>.

Sending events using a server binding object is the standard approach to sending events while the server endpoint is bound to an implementation. However, there may be occasions which call for sending events on a fidl::ServerEnd<TicTacToe> object directly, without setting up a server binding.

fidl::WireSendEvent takes a constant reference to fidl::ServerEnd<Protocol>. It does not support zx::unowned_channel, to reduce the chances of using an endpoint after the handle has been closed elsewhere.

Results

Given a method:

protocol TicTacToe {
    MakeMove(struct {
      row uint8;
      col uint8;
    }) -> (struct {
      new_state GameState;
    }) error MoveError;
};

FIDL will generate convenience methods on the completers corresponding to methods with an error type. Depending on the Reply “variant”, the completer will have ReplySuccess, ReplyError, or both methods to respond directly with the success or error data, without having to construct a union.

For the managed flavor, both methods are available:

  • void ReplySuccess(GameState new_state)
  • void ReplyError(MoveError error)

Since ReplyError doesn't require heap allocation, only ReplySuccess exists for the caller-allocated flavor:

  • void ReplySuccess(fidl::BufferSpan _buffer, GameState new_state)

Note that the passed in buffer is used to hold the entire response, not just the data corresponding to the success variant.

The regularly generated Reply methods are available as well:

  • void Reply(TicTacToe_MakeMove_Result result): Owned variant.
  • void Reply(fidl::BufferSpan _buffer, TicTacToe_MakeMove_Result result): Caller-allocated variant.

The owned and caller-allocated variant use a parameter of TicTacToe_MakeMove_Result, which is generated as a union with two variants: Response, which is a TicTacToe_MakeMove_Response, and Err, which is a MoveError. TicTacToe_MakeMove_Response is generated as a struct with the response parameters as its fields. In this case, it has a single field new_state, which is a GameState.

Protocol composition

FIDL does not have a concept of inheritance, and generates full code as described above for all composed protocols. In other words, the code generated for

protocol A {
    Foo();
};

protocol B {
    compose A;
    Bar();
};

Provides the same API as the code generated for:

protocol A {
    Foo();
};

protocol B {
    Foo();
    Bar();
};

The generated code is identical except for the method ordinals.

Protocol and method attributes

Transitional

For protocol methods annotated with the @transitional attribute, the virtual methods on the protocol class come with a default Close(ZX_NOT_SUPPORTED) implementation. This allows implementations of the protocol class with missing method overrides to compile successfully.

Discoverable

A protocol annotated with the @discoverable attribute causes the FIDL toolchain to generate an additional static const char Name[] field on the protocol class, containing the full protocol name.

Persistence, and standalone use of the FIDL wire format

Standalone use of the FIDL wire format, such as encoding and decoding individual FIDL domain objects, are not yet supported (fxbug.dev/82681).

Test scaffolding

The FIDL toolchain also generates a file suffixed with _test_base.h that contains convenience code for testing FIDL client and server implementations. To use these headers, depend on the generated test scaffolding library with a _testing suffix (my_library_llcpp_testing instead of my_library_llcpp).

Server test base

The test base header contains a class for each protocol that provides stub implementations for each of the class’ methods, making it possible to implement only the methods that are used during testing. These classes are template specializations of fidl::testing::WireTestBase<Protocol> where Protocol is the FIDL protocol that is stubbed (e.g. for protocol games.tictactoe/TicTacToe, the test base is fidl::testing::WireTestBase<games_tictactoe::TicTacToe>).

For the same TicTacToe protocol listed above, generated test base subclasses fidl::WireServer<TicTacToe> (see Protocols), offering the following methods:

  • virtual ~WireTestBase() = default: Destructor.
  • virtual void NotImplemented_(const std::string& name, ::fidl::CompleterBase& completer) = 0: Pure virtual method that is overridden to define behavior for unimplemented methods.

The test base provides an implementation for the virtual protocol methods StartGame and MakeMove, which are implemented to just call NotImplemented_("StartGame", completer) and NotImplemented_("MakeMove", completer), respectively.

Synchronous event handler test base

The test base header contains a class for each protocol that provides stub implementations for each of the class’ events, making it possible to implement only the events that are used during testing. Similar to the server test base, these classes are template specializations of fidl::testing::WireSyncEventHandlerTestBase<Protocol> where Protocol is the FIDL protocol that is stubbed.

For the same TicTacToe protocol listed above, generated test base subclasses fidl::WireSyncEventHandler<TicTacToe> (see Protocols), offering the following events:

  • virtual ~WireSyncEventHandlerTestBase() = default: Destructor.
  • virtual void NotImplemented_(const std::string& name) = 0: Pure virtual method that is overridden to define behavior for unimplemented events.

The test base provides an implementation for the virtual protocol events OnOpponentMove, which is implemented to just call NotImplemented_("OnOpponentMove").