bindgen
Hi! We'd love to have your contributions! If you want help or mentorship, reach out to us in a GitHub issue, or stop by #rust on chat.mozilla.org and introduce yourself.
bindgen
?creduce
to Minimize Test CasesWe abide by the Rust Code of Conduct and ask that you do as well.
Think you've found a bug? File an issue! To help us understand and reproduce the issue, provide us with:
bindgen
flags used to reproduce the issue with the header filebindgen
outputbindgen
outputbindgen
on this testcasebindgen
?rustfmt
/ cargo fmt
We use nightly
channel for rustfmt
, so please set the appropriate setting in your editor/IDE for that.
For rust-analyzer, you can set rustfmt.extraArgs = ['+nightly']
.
To check via command line, you can run cargo +nightly fmt --check
.
To build the bindgen
library and the bindgen
executable:
$ cargo build
If you installed multiple versions of llvm, it may not be able to locate the latest version of libclang. In that case, you may want to either uninstall other versions of llvm, or specify the path of the desired libclang explicitly:
$ export LIBCLANG_PATH=path/to/clang-9.0/lib
Input C/C++ test headers reside in the bindgen-tests/tests/headers
directory. Expected output Rust bindings live in bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests
. For example, bindgen-tests/tests/headers/my_header.h
's expected generated Rust bindings would be bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests/my_header.rs
.
There are also some integration tests in the ./bindgen-integration
crate, which uses bindgen
to generate bindings to some C++ code, and then uses the bindings, asserting that values are what we expect them to be, both on the Rust and C++ side.
The generated and expected bindings are formatted with prettyplease before they are compared. It is a default (but optional) dependency of bindgen
, so be sure to keep that in mind (if you built bindgen
with the --no-default-features
option of Cargo). Note also that rustfmt
formatting is disabled for the bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/
directory tree, which helps avoid failing ui tests.
Note: running cargo test
from the root directory of bindgen
's repository does not automatically test the generated bindings or run the integration tests. These steps must be performed manually when needed.
To regenerate bindings from the corpus of test headers in bindgen-tests/tests/headers
and compare them against the expected bindings in bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests
, run:
$ cargo test
As long as you aren't making any changes to bindgen
's output, running this should be sufficient to test your local modifications.
You may set the BINDGEN_OVERWRITE_EXPECTED
environment variable to overwrite the expected bindings with bindgen
's current output:
$ BINDGEN_OVERWRITE_EXPECTED=1 cargo test
If you set the BINDGEN_TESTS_DIFFTOOL environment variable, cargo test
will execute $BINDGEN_TESTS_DIFFTOOL /path/of/expected/output /path/of/actual/output when the expected output differs from the actual output. You can use this to hand check differences by setting it to e.g. “meld” (assuming you have meld installed).
If you're not changing command line arguments, you may want to set BINDGEN_DISABLE_ROUNDTRIP_TEST
to avoid a lot of tests for round-tripping of those.
If your local changes are introducing expected modifications in the bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests/*
bindings files, then you should test that the generated bindings files still compile, and that their struct layout tests still pass. Also, run the integration tests (see below).
You can do this with these commands:
$ cd bindgen-tests/tests/expectations $ cargo test
Note: You will need to install Graphviz since that is a dependency for running test-one.sh
.
Sometimes it's useful to work with one test header from start (generating bindings for it) to finish (compiling the bindings and running their layout tests). This can be done with the bindgen-tests/tests/test-one.sh
script. It supports fuzzy searching for test headers. For example, to test tests/headers/what_is_going_on.hpp
, execute this command:
$ ./bindgen-tests/tests/test-one.sh going
Note that test-one.sh
does not recompile bindgen
, so if you change the code, you'll need to rebuild it before running the script again.
To add a new test header to the suite, simply put it in the bindgen-tests/tests/headers
directory. Next, run bindgen
to generate the initial expected output Rust bindings. Put those in bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests
.
If your new test requires certain flags to be passed to bindgen
, you can specify them at the top of the test header, with a comment like this:
new_test_header.hpp
:
// bindgen-flags: --enable-cxx-namespaces -- -std=c++14
Then verify the new Rust bindings compile and pass their layout tests:
$ cd bindgen-tests/tests/expectations $ cargo test new_test_header
libclang
VersionsIf a test generates different bindings across different libclang
versions (for example, because we take advantage of better/newer APIs when possible), then you can add multiple test expectations, one for each supported libclang
version. Instead of having a single bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests/my_test.rs
file, add each of:
bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests/libclang-9/my_test.rs
bindgen-tests/tests/expectations/tests/libclang-5/my_test.rs
If you need to update the test expectations for a test file that generates different bindings for different libclang
versions, you don't need to have many versions of libclang
installed locally. Just make a work-in-progress pull request, and then when CI fails, it will log a diff of the expectations. Use the diff to patch the appropriate expectation file locally and then update your pull request.
Usually, bindgen
‘s test runner can infer which version of libclang
you have. If for some reason it can’t, you can force a specific libclang
version to check the bindings against with a cargo feature:
$ cargo test --features __testing_only_libclang_$VERSION
Where $VERSION
is one of:
4
3_9
3_8
depending on which version of libclang
you have installed.
The ./bindgen-integration
crate uses bindgen
to generate bindings to some C++ code, and then uses the bindings, asserting that values are what we expect them to be, both on the Rust and C++ side.
To run the integration tests, issue the following:
$ cd bindgen-integration $ cargo test
bindgen
with csmith
We <3 finding hidden bugs and the people who help us find them! One way to help uncover hidden bugs is by running csmith
to generate random headers to test bindgen
against.
See ./csmith-fuzzing/README.md for details.
bindgen
with quickchecking
The tests/quickchecking
crate generates property tests for bindgen
. From the crate's directory you can run the tests with cargo run
. For details on additional configuration including how to preserve / inspect the generated property tests, see ./tests/quickchecking/README.md.
bindgen
takes C and C++ header files as input and generates corresponding Rust #[repr(C)]
type definitions and extern
foreign function declarations.
First, we use libclang
to parse the input headers. See src/clang.rs
for our Rust-y wrappers over the raw C libclang
API that the clang-sys
crate exposes. We walk over libclang
's AST and construct our own internal representation (IR). The ir
module and submodules (src/ir/*
) contain the IR type definitions and libclang
AST into IR parsing code.
The umbrella IR type is the Item
. It contains various nested enum
s that let us drill down and get more specific about the kind of construct that we're looking at. Here is a summary of the IR types and their relationships:
Item
contains:ItemId
to uniquely identify it.ItemKind
, which is one of:Module
, which is originally a C++ namespace and becomes a Rust module. It contains the set of ItemId
s of Item
s that are defined within it.Type
, which contains:Layout
, describing the type's size and alignment.TypeKind
, which is one of:Pointer
to another type.ItemId
s of its parameter types and return type.Alias
to another type (typedef
or using X = ...
).Array
of n
elements of another type.Comp
compound type, which is either a struct
, class
, or union
. This is potentially a template definition.TemplateInstantiation
referencing some template definition and a set of template argument types.Function
, which contains:FunctionKind
, which describes whether this function is a plain function, method, static method, constructor, destructor, etc.ItemId
of its function pointer type.Var
representing a static variable or #define
constant, which contains:ItemId
clang::SourceLocation
that holds the first source code location where the Item
was encountered.The IR forms a graph of interconnected and inter-referencing types and functions. The ir::traversal
module provides IR graph traversal infrastructure: edge kind definitions (base member vs field type vs function parameter, etc...), the Trace
trait to enumerate an IR thing's outgoing edges, various traversal types.
After constructing the IR, we run a series of analyses on it. These analyses do everything from allocate logical bitfields into physical units, compute for which types we can #[derive(Debug)]
, to determining which implicit template parameters a given type uses. The analyses are defined in src/ir/analysis/*
. They are implemented as fixed-point algorithms, using the ir::analysis::MonotoneFramework
trait.
The final phase is generating Rust source text from the analyzed IR, and it is defined in src/codegen/*
. We use the quote
crate, which provides the quote! { ... }
macro for quasi-quoting Rust forms. Some options that affect the generated Rust code are implemented using the syn
crate.
syn
If a new option can be implemented using the syn
crate it should be added to the codegen::postprocessing
module by following these steps:
BindgenOptions
for the option.codegen::postprocessing
implementing the option. This function with the same name of the BindgenOptions
field.codegen::postprocessing::PASSES
for the option using the pass!
macro.Ensure that each commit stands alone, and passes tests. This enables better git bisect
ing when needed. If your commits do not stand on their own, then rebase them on top of the latest main and squash them into a single commit.
All pull requests undergo code review before merging. To request review, comment r? @github_username_of_reviewer
. They we will respond with r+
to approve the pull request, or may leave feedback and request changes to the pull request. Any changes should be squashed into the original commit.
Unsure who to ask for review? Ask any of:
@emilio
@pvdrz
More resources:
We can generate Graphviz dot files from our internal representation of a C/C++ input header, and then you can create a PNG or PDF from it with Graphviz's dot
program. This is very useful when debugging bindgen!
First, make sure you have Graphviz and dot
installed:
$ brew install graphviz # OS X $ sudo dnf install graphviz # Fedora $ # Etc...
Then, use the --emit-ir-graphviz
flag to generate a dot
file from our IR:
$ cargo run -- example.hpp --emit-ir-graphviz output.dot
Finally, convert the dot
file to an image:
$ dot -Tpng output.dot -o output.png
The final result will look something like this:
To help debug what bindgen
is doing, you can define the environment variable RUST_LOG=bindgen
to get a bunch of debugging log spew.
$ RUST_LOG=bindgen ./target/debug/bindgen [flags...] ~/path/to/some/header.h
This logging can also be used when debugging failing tests:
$ RUST_LOG=bindgen cargo test
creduce
to Minimize Test CasesIf you find a test case that triggers an unexpected panic in bindgen
, causes bindgen
to emit bindings that won't compile, define structs with the wrong size/alignment, or results in any other kind of incorrectness, then using creduce
can help reduce the test case to a minimal one that still exhibits that same bad behavior.
Reduced test cases are SUPER helpful when filing bug reports!
creduce
Often, you can install creduce
from your OS's package manager:
$ sudo apt install creduce $ brew install creduce $ # Etc...
Otherwise, follow these instructions for building and/or installing creduce
.
Running creduce
requires two things:
Your isolated test case, and
A script to act as a predicate script describing whether the behavior you're trying to isolate occurred.
With those two things in hand, running creduce
looks like this:
$ creduce ./predicate.sh ./isolated-test-case.h
If you're using bindgen
as a command line tool, pass --dump-preprocessed-input
flag.
If you're using bindgen
as a Rust library, invoke the bindgen::Builder::dump_preprocessed_input
method where you call bindgen::Builder::generate
.
Afterwards, there should be a __bindgen.i
or __bindgen.ii
file containing the combined and preprocessed input headers, which is usable as an isolated, standalone test case.
Writing a predicate.sh
script for a bindgen
test case is straightforward. We already have a general purpose predicate script that you can use, you just have to wrap and configure it.
#!/usr/bin/env bash # Exit the script with a nonzero exit code if: # * any individual command finishes with a nonzero exit code, or # * we access any undefined variable. set -eu # Invoke the general purpose predicate script that comes in the # `bindgen` repository. # # You'll need to replace `--whatever-flags` with things that are specific to the # incorrectness you're trying to pin down. See below for details. path/to/rust-bindgen/csmith-fuzzing/predicate.py \ --whatever-flags \ ./isolated-test-case.h
When hunting down a particular panic emanating from inside bindgen
, you can invoke predicate.py
like this:
path/to/rust-bindgen/csmith-fuzzing/predicate.py \ --expect-bindgen-fail \ --bindgen-grep "thread main panicked at '<insert panic message here>'" \ ./isolated-test-case.h
Alternatively, when hunting down a bad #[derive(Eq)]
that is causing rustc
to fail to compile bindgen
's emitted bindings, you can invoke predicate.py
like this:
path/to/rust-bindgen/csmith-fuzzing/predicate.py \ --bindings-grep NameOfTheStructThatIsErroneouslyDerivingEq \ --expect-compile-fail \ --rustc-grep 'error[E0277]: the trait bound `f64: std::cmp::Eq` is not satisfied' \ ./isolated-test-case.h
Or, when minimizing a failing layout test in the compiled bindings, you can invoke predicate.py
like this:
path/to/rust-bindgen/csmith-fuzzing/predicate.py \ --bindings-grep MyStruct \ --expect-layout-tests-fail \ --layout-tests-grep "thread 'bindgen_test_layout_MyStruct' panicked" \ ./isolated-test-case.h
For details on all the flags that you can pass to predicate.py
, run:
$ path/to/rust-bindgen/csmith-fuzzing/predicate.py --help
And you can always write your own, arbitrary predicate script if you prefer. (Although, maybe we should add extra functionality to predicate.py
-- file an issue if you think so!)
creduce
is really helpful and can cut hundreds of thousands of lines of test case down to 5 lines.
Happy bug hunting and test case reducing!
More information on using creduce
.
To cut a release, the following needs to happen:
Update the CHANGELOG.md file with the changes from the last release. Something like the following is a useful way to check what has landed:
$ git log --oneline v0.62.0..HEAD
Also worth checking the next-release tag.
Once that's done and the changelog is up-to-date, run doctoc
on it.
If needed, install it locally by running:
$ npm install doctoc $ ./node_modules/doctoc/doctoc.js CHANGELOG.md
main
For regular releases, the changes above should end up in main
before publishing. For dot-releases of an old version (e.g., cherry-picking an important fix) you can skip this.
Once you're in the right branch, do:
cargo release [patch|minor] --no-publish --execute
This does the following:
git tag
) the HEAD commitcargo publish
) bindgen and bindgen-cligit push
) to GitHubThe patch
and minor
refer to semver concepts:
patch
would bump v0.68.1 to v0.68.2feature
would bump v0.68.2 to v0.69.0The release is automated with the help of .github/workflows/release.yml
, and will only be created...
While the tests are still running, a draft GitHub release will be created, to avoid notifying watchers of the repo should a CI step fail.
If everything succeeds, bindgen cli installers for Linux/MacOS and Windows will be created, as well as tarballs. See [workspace.metadata.dist]
section in Cargo.toml for the configuration.
To update the release configuration, when a new cargo-dist is available:
cargo dist init # from "cargo install cargo-dist" cargo dist generate-ci # to update .github/workflows/release.yml