From 698f8c2f01ea549d77d7dc3338a12e04c11057b9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:02:58 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1.64.0+dfsg1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- vendor/libloading/src/lib.rs | 80 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 80 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/libloading/src/lib.rs (limited to 'vendor/libloading/src/lib.rs') diff --git a/vendor/libloading/src/lib.rs b/vendor/libloading/src/lib.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6f0e4cb7f --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/libloading/src/lib.rs @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +//! Bindings around the platform's dynamic library loading primitives with greatly improved memory safety. +//! +//! Using this library allows the loading of [dynamic libraries](struct.Library.html), also known as +//! shared libraries, and the use of the functions and static variables they contain. +//! +//! The `libloading` crate exposes a cross-platform interface to load a library and make use of its +//! contents, but little is done to hide the differences in behaviour between platforms. +//! The API documentation strives to document such differences as much as possible. +//! +//! Platform-specific APIs are also available in the [`os`](crate::os) module. These APIs are more +//! flexible, but less safe. +//! +//! # Installation +//! +//! Add the `libloading` library to your dependencies in `Cargo.toml`: +//! +//! ```toml +//! [dependencies] +//! libloading = "0.7" +//! ``` +//! +//! # Usage +//! +//! In your code, run the following: +//! +//! ```no_run +//! fn call_dynamic() -> Result> { +//! unsafe { +//! let lib = libloading::Library::new("/path/to/liblibrary.so")?; +//! let func: libloading::Symbol u32> = lib.get(b"my_func")?; +//! Ok(func()) +//! } +//! } +//! ``` +//! +//! The compiler will ensure that the loaded function will not outlive the `Library` from which it comes, +//! preventing the most common memory-safety issues. +#![cfg_attr(any(unix, windows), deny(missing_docs, clippy::all, unreachable_pub, unused))] +#![cfg_attr(libloading_docs, feature(doc_cfg))] + +pub mod changelog; +pub mod os; +mod util; + +mod error; +pub use self::error::Error; + +#[cfg(any(unix, windows, libloading_docs))] +mod safe; +#[cfg(any(unix, windows, libloading_docs))] +pub use self::safe::{Library, Symbol}; + +use std::env::consts::{DLL_PREFIX, DLL_SUFFIX}; +use std::ffi::{OsStr, OsString}; + +/// Converts a library name to a filename generally appropriate for use on the system. +/// +/// This function will prepend prefixes (such as `lib`) and suffixes (such as `.so`) to the library +/// `name` to construct the filename. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// It can be used to load global libraries in a platform independent manner: +/// +/// ``` +/// use libloading::{Library, library_filename}; +/// // Will attempt to load `libLLVM.so` on Linux, `libLLVM.dylib` on macOS and `LLVM.dll` on +/// // Windows. +/// let library = unsafe { +/// Library::new(library_filename("LLVM")) +/// }; +/// ``` +pub fn library_filename>(name: S) -> OsString { + let name = name.as_ref(); + let mut string = OsString::with_capacity(name.len() + DLL_PREFIX.len() + DLL_SUFFIX.len()); + string.push(DLL_PREFIX); + string.push(name); + string.push(DLL_SUFFIX); + string +} -- cgit v1.2.3