summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/docs/users_guide/ffi-chap.rst
blob: f0b9e3fd34a0907dfc9d72a80ef342fd782a391d (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
1003
1004
.. _ffi:

Foreign function interface (FFI)
================================

.. index::
   single: Foreign function interface
   single: interfacing with native code

.. extension:: ForeignFunctionInterface
    :shortdesc: Enable foreign function interface.

    :since: 6.8.1

    Allow use of the Haskell foreign function interface.

GHC (mostly) conforms to the Haskell Foreign Function Interface as specified
in the Haskell Report. Refer to the `relevant chapter
<https://www.haskell.org/onlinereport/haskell2010/haskellch8.html>`__
of the Haskell Report for more details.

FFI support is enabled by default, but can be enabled or disabled
explicitly with the :extension:`ForeignFunctionInterface` flag.

GHC implements a number of GHC-specific extensions to the FFI Chapter of the
Haskell 2010 Report. These extensions are described in :ref:`ffi-ghcexts`, but
please note that programs using these features are not portable. Hence, these
features should be avoided where possible.

The FFI libraries are documented in the accompanying  library
documentation; see for example the :base-ref:`Foreign.` module.

GHC differences to the FFI Chapter
----------------------------------

Guaranteed call safety
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Haskell 2010 Report specifies that ``safe`` FFI calls must allow foreign
calls to safely call into Haskell code. In practice, this means that the
garbage collector must be able to run while these calls are in progress,
moving heap-allocated Haskell values around arbitrarily.

This greatly constrains library authors since it implies that it is not safe to
pass any heap object reference to a ``safe`` foreign function call.  For
instance, it is often desirable to pass an :ref:`unpinned <pinned-byte-arrays>`
``ByteArray#``\s directly to native code to avoid making an otherwise-unnecessary
copy. However, this can only be done safely if the array is guaranteed not to be
moved by the garbage collector in the middle of the call.

The Chapter does *not* require implementations to refrain from doing the
same for ``unsafe`` calls, so strictly Haskell 2010-conforming programs
cannot pass heap-allocated references to ``unsafe`` FFI calls either.

In previous releases, GHC would take advantage of the freedom afforded by the
Chapter by performing ``safe`` foreign calls in place of ``unsafe`` calls in
the bytecode interpreter. This meant that some packages which worked when
compiled would fail under GHCi (e.g. :ghc-ticket:`13730`).

However, since version 8.4 this is no longer the case: GHC **guarantees** that
garbage collection will never occur during an ``unsafe`` call, even in the
bytecode interpreter, and further guarantees that ``unsafe`` calls will be
performed in the calling thread.


.. _ffi-ghcexts:

GHC extensions to the FFI Chapter
---------------------------------

The FFI features that are described in this section are specific to GHC.
Your code will not be portable to other compilers if you use them.

Unlifted FFI Types
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. extension:: UnliftedFFITypes
    :shortdesc: Enable unlifted FFI types

    :since: 6.8.1

The following unlifted unboxed types may be used as basic foreign
types (see FFI Chapter, Section 8.6) for both ``safe`` and
``unsafe`` foreign calls: ``Int#``, ``Word#``, ``Char#``, ``Float#``,
``Double#``, ``Addr#``, and ``StablePtr# a``. Several unlifted boxed
types may be used as arguments to FFI calls, subject to these
restrictions:

* Valid arguments for ``foreign import unsafe`` FFI calls: ``Array#``,
  ``SmallArray#``, ``ArrayArray#``, ``ByteArray#``, and the mutable
  counterparts of these types.
* Valid arguments for ``foreign import safe`` FFI calls: ``ByteArray#``
  and ``MutableByteArray#``. The byte array must be
  :ref:`pinned <pinned-byte-arrays>`.
* Mutation: In both ``foreign import unsafe`` and ``foreign import safe``
  FFI calls, it is safe to mutate a ``MutableByteArray``. Mutating any
  other type of array leads to undefined behavior. Reason: Mutable arrays
  of heap objects record writes for the purpose of garbage collection.
  An array of heap objects is passed to a foreign C function, the
  runtime does not record any writes. Consequently, it is not safe to
  write to an array of heap objects in a foreign function. 
  Since the runtime has no facilities for tracking mutation of a
  ``MutableByteArray#``, these can be safely mutated in any foreign
  function.

None of these restrictions are enforced at compile time. Failure
to heed these restrictions will lead to runtime errors that can be
very difficult to track down. (The errors likely will not manifest
until garbage collection happens.) In tabular form, these restrictions
are:

+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
|                  | When value is used as argument to FFI call that is |
+------------------+-----------------------+----------------------------+
| Type             | Safe                  | Unsafe                     |
+------------------+-----------------------+----------------------------+
| ``Array#``       | Unsound               | Sound, not useful          |
| ``SmallArray#``  | Unsound               | Sound, not useful          |
| ``ArrayArray#``  | Unsound               | Sound                      |
| ``ByteArray#``   | Sound if pinned       | Sound                      |
+------------------+-----------------------+----------------------------+

When passing any of the unlifted array types as an argument to
a foreign C call, a foreign function sees a pointer that refers to the
payload of the array, not to the
``StgArrBytes``/``StgMutArrPtrs``/``StgSmallMutArrPtrs`` heap object
containing it [1]_. By contrast, a foreign Cmm call, introduced by
``foreign import prim``, sees the heap object, not just the payload.
This means that, in some situations, the foreign C function might not
need any knowledge of the RTS closure types. The following example
sums the first three bytes in a
``MutableByteArray#`` [2]_ without using anything from ``Rts.h``::

    // C source
    uint8_t add_triplet(uint8_t* arr) {
      return (arr[0] + arr[1] + arr[2]);
    }

    -- Haskell source
    foreign import ccall unsafe "add_triplet"
      addTriplet :: MutableByteArray# RealWorld -> IO Word8

In other situations, the C function may need knowledge of the RTS
closure types. The following example sums the first element of
each ``ByteArray#`` (interpreting the bytes as an array of ``CInt``)
element of an ``ArrayArray##`` [3]_::
    
    // C source, must include the RTS to make the struct StgArrBytes
    // available along with its fields: ptrs and payload.
    #include "Rts.h"
    int sum_first (StgArrBytes **bufs) {
      StgArrBytes **bufs = (StgArrBytes**)bufsTmp;
      int res = 0;
      for(StgWord ix = 0;ix < arr->ptrs;ix++) {
        res = res + ((int*)(bufs[ix]->payload))[0];
      }
      return res;
    }

    -- Haskell source, all elements in the argument array must be
    -- either ByteArray# or MutableByteArray#. This is not enforced
    -- by the type system in this example since ArrayArray is untyped.
    foreign import ccall unsafe "sum_first"
      sumFirst :: ArrayArray# -> IO CInt

Although GHC allows the user to pass all unlifted boxed types to
foreign functions, some of them are not amenable to useful work.
Although ``Array#`` is unlifted, the elements in its payload are
lifted, and a foreign C function cannot safely force thunks. Consequently,
a foreign C function cannot dereference any of the addresses that comprise
the payload of the ``Array#``.

.. _ffi-newtype-io:

Newtype wrapping of the IO monad
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The FFI spec requires the IO monad to appear in various places, but it
can sometimes be convenient to wrap the IO monad in a ``newtype``, thus: ::

       newtype MyIO a = MIO (IO a)

(A reason for doing so might be to prevent the programmer from calling
arbitrary IO procedures in some part of the program.)

The Haskell FFI already specifies that arguments and results of foreign
imports and exports will be automatically unwrapped if they are newtypes
(Section 3.2 of the FFI addendum). GHC extends the FFI by automatically
unwrapping any newtypes that wrap the IO monad itself. More precisely,
wherever the FFI specification requires an ``IO`` type, GHC will accept any
newtype-wrapping of an ``IO`` type. For example, these declarations are
OK: ::

       foreign import foo :: Int -> MyIO Int
       foreign import "dynamic" baz :: (Int -> MyIO Int) -> CInt -> MyIO Int

.. _ffi-foralls:

Explicit "forall"s in foreign types
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The type variables in the type of a foreign declaration may be quantified with
an explicit ``forall`` by using the :extension:`ExplicitForAll` language
extension, as in the following example: ::

       {-# LANGUAGE ExplicitForAll #-}
       foreign import ccall "mmap" c_mmap :: forall a. CSize -> IO (Ptr a)

Note that an explicit ``forall`` must appear at the front of the type signature
and is not permitted to appear nested within the type, as in the following
(erroneous) examples: ::

       foreign import ccall "mmap" c_mmap' :: CSize -> forall a. IO (Ptr a)
       foreign import ccall quux :: (forall a. Ptr a) -> IO ()

.. _ffi-prim:

Primitive imports
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GHC extends the FFI with an additional calling convention ``prim``,
e.g.: ::

       foreign import prim "foo" foo :: ByteArray# -> (# Int#, Int# #)

This is used to import functions written in Cmm code that follow an
internal GHC calling convention. The arguments and results must be
unboxed types, except that an argument may be of type ``Any`` (by way of
``unsafeCoerce#``) and the result type is allowed to be an unboxed tuple
or the type ``Any``.

This feature is not intended for use outside of the core libraries that
come with GHC. For more details see the
:ghc-wiki:`GHC developer wiki <commentary/prim-ops>`.

.. _ffi-interruptible:

Interruptible foreign calls
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. extension:: InterruptibleFFI
    :shortdesc: Enable interruptible FFI.

    :since: 7.2.1

This concerns the interaction of foreign calls with
``Control.Concurrent.throwTo``. Normally when the target of a
``throwTo`` is involved in a foreign call, the exception is not raised
until the call returns, and in the meantime the caller is blocked. This
can result in unresponsiveness, which is particularly undesirable in the
case of user interrupt (e.g. Control-C). The default behaviour when a
Control-C signal is received (``SIGINT`` on Unix) is to raise the
``UserInterrupt`` exception in the main thread; if the main thread is
blocked in a foreign call at the time, then the program will not respond
to the user interrupt.

The problem is that it is not possible in general to interrupt a foreign
call safely. However, GHC does provide a way to interrupt blocking
system calls which works for most system calls on both Unix and Windows.
When the ``InterruptibleFFI`` extension is enabled, a foreign call can
be annotated with ``interruptible`` instead of ``safe`` or ``unsafe``: ::

    foreign import ccall interruptible
       "sleep" sleepBlock :: CUint -> IO CUint

``interruptible`` behaves exactly as ``safe``, except that when a
``throwTo`` is directed at a thread in an interruptible foreign call, an
OS-specific mechanism will be used to attempt to cause the foreign call
to return:

Unix systems
    The thread making the foreign call is sent a ``SIGPIPE`` signal
    using ``pthread_kill()``. This is usually enough to cause a blocking
    system call to return with ``EINTR`` (GHC by default installs an
    empty signal handler for ``SIGPIPE``, to override the default
    behaviour which is to terminate the process immediately).

Windows systems
    [Vista and later only] The RTS calls the Win32 function
    ``CancelSynchronousIo``, which will cause a blocking I/O operation
    to return with the error ``ERROR_OPERATION_ABORTED``.

If the system call is successfully interrupted, it will return to
Haskell whereupon the exception can be raised. Be especially careful
when using ``interruptible`` that the caller of the foreign function is
prepared to deal with the consequences of the call being interrupted; on
Unix it is good practice to check for ``EINTR`` always, but on Windows
it is not typically necessary to handle ``ERROR_OPERATION_ABORTED``.

.. _ffi-capi:

The CAPI calling convention
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. extension:: CApiFFI
    :shortdesc: Enable the CAPI calling convention.

    :since: 7.10.1

The ``CApiFFI`` extension allows a calling convention of ``capi`` to be
used in foreign declarations, e.g. ::

    foreign import capi "header.h f" f :: CInt -> IO CInt

Rather than generating code to call ``f`` according to the platform's
ABI, we instead call ``f`` using the C API defined in the header
``header.h``. Thus ``f`` can be called even if it may be defined as a
CPP ``#define`` rather than a proper function.

When using ``capi``, it is also possible to import values, rather than
functions. For example, ::

    foreign import capi "pi.h value pi" c_pi :: CDouble

will work regardless of whether ``pi`` is defined as

.. code-block:: c

    const double pi = 3.14;

or with

.. code-block:: c

    #define pi 3.14

In order to tell GHC the C type that a Haskell type corresponds to when
it is used with the CAPI, a ``CTYPE`` pragma can be used on the type
definition. The header which defines the type can optionally also be
specified. The syntax looks like: ::

    data    {-# CTYPE "unistd.h" "useconds_t" #-} T = ...
    newtype {-# CTYPE            "useconds_t" #-} T = ...

``hs_thread_done()``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. code-block:: c

    void hs_thread_done(void);

GHC allocates a small amount of thread-local memory when a thread calls
a Haskell function via a ``foreign export``. This memory is not normally
freed until ``hs_exit()``; the memory is cached so that subsequent calls
into Haskell are fast. However, if your application is long-running and
repeatedly creates new threads that call into Haskell, you probably want
to arrange that this memory is freed in those threads that have finished
calling Haskell functions. To do this, call ``hs_thread_done()`` from
the thread whose memory you want to free.

Calling ``hs_thread_done()`` is entirely optional. You can call it as
often or as little as you like. It is safe to call it from a thread that
has never called any Haskell functions, or one that never will. If you
forget to call it, the worst that can happen is that some memory remains
allocated until ``hs_exit()`` is called. If you call it too often, the
worst that can happen is that the next call to a Haskell function incurs
some extra overhead.

.. _ffi-stable-ptr-extras:

Freeing many stable pointers efficiently
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The standard function ``hs_free_stable_ptr`` locks the stable pointer
table, frees the given stable pointer, and then unlocks the stable pointer
table again. When freeing many stable pointers at once, it is usually
more efficient to lock and unlock the table only once.

.. code-block:: c

    extern void hs_lock_stable_ptr_table (void);

    extern void hs_unlock_stable_ptr_table (void);

    extern void hs_free_stable_ptr_unsafe (HsStablePtr sp);

``hs_free_stable_ptr_unsafe`` must be used *only* when the table has been
locked using ``hs_lock_stable_ptr_table``. It must be unlocked afterwards
using ``hs_unlock_stable_ptr_table``. The Haskell garbage collector cannot
run while the table is locked, so it should be unlocked promptly. The
following operations are forbidden while the stable pointer table is locked:

* Calling any Haskell function, whether or not that function
  manipulates stable pointers.

* Calling any FFI function that deals with the stable pointer table
  except for arbitrarily many calls to ``hs_free_stable_ptr_unsafe``
  and the final call to ``hs_unlock_stable_ptr_table``.

* Calling ``hs_free_fun_ptr``.

.. note::

    GHC versions before 8.8 defined undocumented functions
    ``hs_lock_stable_tables`` and ``hs_unlock_stable_tables`` instead
    of ``hs_lock_stable_ptr_table`` and ``hs_unlock_stable_ptr_table``.
    Those names are now deprecated.

.. _ffi-ghc:

Using the FFI with GHC
----------------------

The following sections also give some hints and tips on the use of the
foreign function interface in GHC.

.. _foreign-export-ghc:

Using ``foreign export`` and ``foreign import ccall "wrapper"`` with GHC
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. index::
   single: foreign export; with GHC

When GHC compiles a module (say ``M.hs``) which uses ``foreign export``
or ``foreign import "wrapper"``, it generates a ``M_stub.h`` for use by
C programs.

For a plain ``foreign export``, the file ``M_stub.h`` contains a C
prototype for the foreign exported function. For example, if we compile
the following module: ::

    module Foo where

    foreign export ccall foo :: Int -> IO Int

    foo :: Int -> IO Int
    foo n = return (length (f n))

    f :: Int -> [Int]
    f 0 = []
    f n = n:(f (n-1))

Then ``Foo_stub.h`` will contain something like this:

.. code-block:: c

    #include "HsFFI.h"
    extern HsInt foo(HsInt a0);

To invoke ``foo()`` from C, just ``#include "Foo_stub.h"`` and call
``foo()``.

The ``Foo_stub.h`` file can be redirected using the ``-stubdir`` option;
see :ref:`options-output`.

.. _using-own-main:

Using your own ``main()``
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Normally, GHC's runtime system provides a ``main()``, which arranges to
invoke ``Main.main`` in the Haskell program. However, you might want to
link some Haskell code into a program which has a main function written
in another language, say C. In order to do this, you have to initialize
the Haskell runtime system explicitly.

Let's take the example from above, and invoke it from a standalone C
program. Here's the C code:

.. code-block:: c

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include "HsFFI.h"

    #if defined(__GLASGOW_HASKELL__)
    #include "Foo_stub.h"
    #endif

    int main(int argc, char *argv[])
    {
      int i;

      hs_init(&argc, &argv);

      for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
        printf("%d\n", foo(2500));
      }

      hs_exit();
      return 0;
    }

We've surrounded the GHC-specific bits with
``#if defined(__GLASGOW_HASKELL__)``; the rest of the code should be portable
across Haskell implementations that support the FFI standard.

The call to ``hs_init()`` initializes GHC's runtime system. Do NOT try
to invoke any Haskell functions before calling ``hs_init()``: bad things
will undoubtedly happen.

We pass references to ``argc`` and ``argv`` to ``hs_init()`` so that it
can separate out any arguments for the RTS (i.e. those arguments between
``+RTS...-RTS``).

After we've finished invoking our Haskell functions, we can call
``hs_exit()``, which terminates the RTS.

There can be multiple calls to ``hs_init()``, but each one should be matched by
one (and only one) call to ``hs_exit()``. The outermost ``hs_exit()`` will
actually de-initialise the system.  Note that currently GHC's runtime cannot
reliably re-initialise after this has happened; see :ref:`infelicities-ffi`.

.. note::
    When linking the final program, it is normally easiest to do the
    link using GHC, although this isn't essential. If you do use GHC, then
    don't forget the flag :ghc-flag:`-no-hs-main`, otherwise GHC
    will try to link to the ``Main`` Haskell module.

.. note::
    On Windows hs_init treats argv as UTF8-encoded. Passing other encodings
    might lead to unexpected results. Passing NULL as argv is valid but can
    lead to <unknown> showing up in error messages instead of the name of the
    executable.

To use ``+RTS`` flags with ``hs_init()``, we have to modify the example
slightly. By default, GHC's RTS will only accept "safe" ``+RTS`` flags (see
:ref:`options-linker`), and the :ghc-flag:`-rtsopts[=⟨none|some|all|ignore|ignoreAll⟩]`
link-time flag overrides this. However,
:ghc-flag:`-rtsopts[=⟨none|some|all|ignore|ignoreAll⟩]` has no effect when
:ghc-flag:`-no-hs-main` is in use (and the same goes for
:ghc-flag:`-with-rtsopts=⟨opts⟩`). To set these options we have to call a
GHC-specific API instead of ``hs_init()``:

.. code-block:: c

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include "HsFFI.h"

    #if defined(__GLASGOW_HASKELL__)
    #include "Foo_stub.h"
    #include "Rts.h"
    #endif

    int main(int argc, char *argv[])
    {
      int i;

    #if __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ >= 703
      {
          RtsConfig conf = defaultRtsConfig;
          conf.rts_opts_enabled = RtsOptsAll;
          hs_init_ghc(&argc, &argv, conf);
      }
    #else
      hs_init(&argc, &argv);
    #endif

      for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
        printf("%d\n", foo(2500));
      }

      hs_exit();
      return 0;
    }

Note two changes: we included ``Rts.h``, which defines the GHC-specific
external RTS interface, and we called ``hs_init_ghc()`` instead of
``hs_init()``, passing an argument of type ``RtsConfig``. ``RtsConfig``
is a struct with various fields that affect the behaviour of the runtime
system. Its definition is:

.. code-block:: c

    typedef struct {
        RtsOptsEnabledEnum rts_opts_enabled;
        const char *rts_opts;
    } RtsConfig;

    extern const RtsConfig defaultRtsConfig;

    typedef enum {
        RtsOptsNone,         // +RTS causes an error
        RtsOptsSafeOnly,     // safe RTS options allowed; others cause an error
        RtsOptsAll           // all RTS options allowed
      } RtsOptsEnabledEnum;

There is a default value ``defaultRtsConfig`` that should be used to
initialise variables of type ``RtsConfig``. More fields will undoubtedly
be added to ``RtsConfig`` in the future, so in order to keep your code
forwards-compatible it is best to initialise with ``defaultRtsConfig``
and then modify the required fields, as in the code sample above.

.. _ffi-library:

Making a Haskell library that can be called from foreign code
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The scenario here is much like in :ref:`using-own-main`, except that the
aim is not to link a complete program, but to make a library from
Haskell code that can be deployed in the same way that you would deploy
a library of C code.

The main requirement here is that the runtime needs to be initialized
before any Haskell code can be called, so your library should provide
initialisation and deinitialisation entry points, implemented in C or
C++. For example:

.. code-block:: c

    #include <stdlib.h>
    #include "HsFFI.h"

    HsBool mylib_init(void){
      int argc = 2;
      char *argv[] = { "+RTS", "-A32m", NULL };
      char **pargv = argv;

      // Initialize Haskell runtime
      hs_init(&argc, &pargv);

      // do any other initialization here and
      // return false if there was a problem
      return HS_BOOL_TRUE;
    }

    void mylib_end(void){
      hs_exit();
    }

The initialisation routine, ``mylib_init``, calls ``hs_init()`` as
normal to initialise the Haskell runtime, and the corresponding
deinitialisation function ``mylib_end()`` calls ``hs_exit()`` to shut
down the runtime.

.. _glasgow-foreign-headers:

Using header files
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. index::
   single: C calls, function headers

C functions are normally declared using prototypes in a C header file.
Earlier versions of GHC (6.8.3 and earlier) ``#include``\ d the header
file in the C source file generated from the Haskell code, and the C
compiler could therefore check that the C function being called via the
FFI was being called at the right type.

GHC no longer includes external header files when compiling via C, so
this checking is not performed. The change was made for compatibility
with the :ref:`native code generator <native-code-gen>` (:ghc-flag:`-fasm`) and to
comply strictly with the FFI specification, which requires that FFI calls are
not subject to macro expansion and other CPP conversions that may be applied
when using C header files. This approach also simplifies the inlining of foreign
calls across module and package boundaries: there's no need for the header file
to be available when compiling an inlined version of a foreign call, so the
compiler is free to inline foreign calls in any context.

The ``-#include`` option is now deprecated, and the ``include-files``
field in a Cabal package specification is ignored.

Memory Allocation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The FFI libraries provide several ways to allocate memory for use with
the FFI, and it isn't always clear which way is the best. This decision
may be affected by how efficient a particular kind of allocation is on a
given compiler/platform, so this section aims to shed some light on how
the different kinds of allocation perform with GHC.

``alloca``
    Useful for short-term allocation when the allocation is intended to
    scope over a given ``IO`` computation. This kind of allocation is
    commonly used when marshalling data to and from FFI functions.

    In GHC, ``alloca`` is implemented using ``MutableByteArray#``, so
    allocation and deallocation are fast: much faster than C's
    ``malloc/free``, but not quite as fast as stack allocation in C. Use
    ``alloca`` whenever you can.

``mallocForeignPtr``
    Useful for longer-term allocation which requires garbage collection.
    If you intend to store the pointer to the memory in a foreign data
    structure, then ``mallocForeignPtr`` is *not* a good choice,
    however.

    In GHC, ``mallocForeignPtr`` is also implemented using
    ``MutableByteArray#``. Although the memory is pointed to by a
    ``ForeignPtr``, there are no actual finalizers involved (unless you
    add one with ``addForeignPtrFinalizer``), and the deallocation is
    done using GC, so ``mallocForeignPtr`` is normally very cheap.

``malloc/free``
    If all else fails, then you need to resort to ``Foreign.malloc`` and
    ``Foreign.free``. These are just wrappers around the C functions of
    the same name, and their efficiency will depend ultimately on the
    implementations of these functions in your platform's C library. We
    usually find ``malloc`` and ``free`` to be significantly slower than
    the other forms of allocation above.

``Foreign.Marshal.Pool``
    Pools are currently implemented using ``malloc/free``, so while they
    might be a more convenient way to structure your memory allocation
    than using one of the other forms of allocation, they won't be any
    more efficient. We do plan to provide an improved-performance
    implementation of Pools in the future, however.

.. _ffi-threads:

Multi-threading and the FFI
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In order to use the FFI in a multi-threaded setting, you must use the
:ghc-flag:`-threaded` option (see :ref:`options-linker`).

Foreign imports and multi-threading
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

When you call a ``foreign import``\ ed function that is annotated as
``safe`` (the default), and the program was linked using :ghc-flag:`-threaded`,
then the call will run concurrently with other running Haskell threads.
If the program was linked without :ghc-flag:`-threaded`, then the other Haskell
threads will be blocked until the call returns.

This means that if you need to make a foreign call to a function that
takes a long time or blocks indefinitely, then you should mark it
``safe`` and use :ghc-flag:`-threaded`. Some library functions make such calls
internally; their documentation should indicate when this is the case.

If you are making foreign calls from multiple Haskell threads and using
:ghc-flag:`-threaded`, make sure that the foreign code you are calling is
thread-safe. In particularly, some GUI libraries are not thread-safe and
require that the caller only invokes GUI methods from a single thread.
If this is the case, you may need to restrict your GUI operations to a
single Haskell thread, and possibly also use a bound thread (see
:ref:`haskell-threads-and-os-threads`).

Note that foreign calls made by different Haskell threads may execute in
*parallel*, even when the ``+RTS -N`` flag is not being used
(:ref:`parallel-options`). The :rts-flag:`-N ⟨x⟩` flag controls parallel
execution of Haskell threads, but there may be an arbitrary number of
foreign calls in progress at any one time, regardless of the ``+RTS -N``
value.

If a call is annotated as ``interruptible`` and the program was
multithreaded, the call may be interrupted in the event that the Haskell
thread receives an exception. The mechanism by which the interrupt
occurs is platform dependent, but is intended to cause blocking system
calls to return immediately with an interrupted error code. The
underlying operating system thread is not to be destroyed. See
:ref:`ffi-interruptible` for more details.

.. _haskell-threads-and-os-threads:

The relationship between Haskell threads and OS threads
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Normally there is no fixed relationship between Haskell threads and OS
threads. This means that when you make a foreign call, that call may
take place in an unspecified OS thread. Furthermore, there is no
guarantee that multiple calls made by one Haskell thread will be made by
the same OS thread.

This usually isn't a problem, and it allows the GHC runtime system to
make efficient use of OS thread resources. However, there are cases
where it is useful to have more control over which OS thread is used,
for example when calling foreign code that makes use of thread-local
state. For cases like this, we provide *bound threads*, which are
Haskell threads tied to a particular OS thread. For information on bound
threads, see the documentation for the :base-ref:`Control.Concurrent.` module.

Foreign exports and multi-threading
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

When the program is linked with :ghc-flag:`-threaded`, then you may invoke
``foreign export``\ ed functions from multiple OS threads concurrently.
The runtime system must be initialised as usual by calling
``hs_init()``, and this call must complete before invoking any
``foreign export``\ ed functions.

.. _hs-exit:

On the use of ``hs_exit()``
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

``hs_exit()`` normally causes the termination of any running Haskell
threads in the system, and when ``hs_exit()`` returns, there will be no
more Haskell threads running. The runtime will then shut down the system
in an orderly way, generating profiling output and statistics if
necessary, and freeing all the memory it owns.

It isn't always possible to terminate a Haskell thread forcibly: for
example, the thread might be currently executing a foreign call, and we
have no way to force the foreign call to complete. What's more, the
runtime must assume that in the worst case the Haskell code and runtime
are about to be removed from memory (e.g. if this is a
:ref:`Windows DLL <win32-dlls>`, ``hs_exit()`` is normally called before unloading
the DLL). So ``hs_exit()`` *must* wait until all outstanding foreign
calls return before it can return itself.

The upshot of this is that if you have Haskell threads that are blocked
in foreign calls, then ``hs_exit()`` may hang (or possibly busy-wait)
until the calls return. Therefore it's a good idea to make sure you
don't have any such threads in the system when calling ``hs_exit()``.
This includes any threads doing I/O, because I/O may (or may not,
depending on the type of I/O and the platform) be implemented using
blocking foreign calls.

The GHC runtime treats program exit as a special case, to avoid the need
to wait for blocked threads when a standalone executable exits. Since
the program and all its threads are about to terminate at the same time
that the code is removed from memory, it isn't necessary to ensure that
the threads have exited first.  If you want this fast and loose
version of ``hs_exit()``, you can call:

.. code-block:: c

   void hs_exit_nowait(void);

instead.  This is particularly useful if you have foreign libraries
that need to call ``hs_exit()`` at program exit (perhaps via a C++
destructor): in this case you should use ``hs_exit_nowait()``, because
the thread that called ``exit()`` and is running C++ destructors is in
a foreign call from Haskell that will never return, so ``hs_exit()``
would deadlock.

.. _hs_try_putmvar:

Waking up Haskell threads from C
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Sometimes we want to be able to wake up a Haskell thread from some C
code.  For example, when using a callback-based C API, we register a C
callback and then we need to wait for the callback to run.

One way to do this is to create a ``foreign export`` that will do
whatever needs to be done to wake up the Haskell thread - perhaps
``putMVar`` - and then call this from our C callback.  There are a
couple of problems with this:

1. Calling a foreign export has a lot of overhead: it creates a
   complete new Haskell thread, for example.
2. The call may block for a long time if a GC is in progress.  We
   can't use this method if the C API we're calling doesn't allow
   blocking in the callback.

For these reasons GHC provides an external API to ``tryPutMVar``,
``hs_try_putmvar``, which you can use to cheaply and asynchronously
wake up a Haskell thread from C/C++.

.. code-block:: c

  void hs_try_putmvar (int capability, HsStablePtr sp);

The C call ``hs_try_putmvar(cap, mvar)`` is equivalent to the Haskell
call ``tryPutMVar mvar ()``, except that it is

* non-blocking: takes a bounded, short, amount of time

* asynchronous: the actual putMVar may be performed after the call
  returns (for example, if the RTS is currently garbage collecting).
  That's why ``hs_try_putmvar()`` doesn't return a result to say
  whether the put succeeded.  It is your responsibility to ensure that
  the ``MVar`` is empty; if it is full, ``hs_try_putmvar()`` will have
  no effect.

**Example**. Suppose we have a C/C++ function to call that will return and then
invoke a callback at some point in the future, passing us some data.
We want to wait in Haskell for the callback to be called, and retrieve
the data.  We can do it like this:

.. code-block:: haskell

     import GHC.Conc (newStablePtrPrimMVar, PrimMVar)

     makeExternalCall = mask_ $ do
       mvar <- newEmptyMVar
       sp <- newStablePtrPrimMVar mvar
       fp <- mallocForeignPtr
       withForeignPtr fp $ \presult -> do
         cap <- threadCapability =<< myThreadId
         scheduleCallback sp cap presult
         takeMVar mvar `onException`
           forkIO (do takeMVar mvar; touchForeignPtr fp)
         peek presult

     foreign import ccall "scheduleCallback"
         scheduleCallback :: StablePtr PrimMVar
                          -> Int
                          -> Ptr Result
                          -> IO ()

And inside ``scheduleCallback``, we create a callback that will in due
course store the result data in the ``Ptr Result``, and then call
``hs_try_putmvar()``.

There are a few things to note here.

* There's a special function to create the ``StablePtr``:
  ``newStablePtrPrimMVar``, because the RTS needs a ``StablePtr`` to
  the primitive ``MVar#`` object, and we can't create that directly.
  Do *not* just use ``newStablePtr`` on the ``MVar``: your program
  will crash.

* The ``StablePtr`` is freed by ``hs_try_putmvar()``.  This is because
  it would otherwise be difficult to arrange to free the ``StablePtr``
  reliably: we can't free it in Haskell, because if the ``takeMVar``
  is interrupted by an asynchronous exception, then the callback will
  fire at a later time.  We can't free it in C, because we don't know
  when to free it (not when ``hs_try_putmvar()`` returns, because that
  is an async call that uses the ``StablePtr`` at some time in the
  future).

* The ``mask_`` is to avoid asynchronous exceptions before the
  ``scheduleCallback`` call, which would leak the ``StablePtr``.

* We find out the current capability number and pass it to C.  This is
  passed back to ``hs_try_putmvar``, and helps the RTS to know which
  capability it should try to perform the ``tryPutMVar`` on.  If you
  don't care, you can pass ``-1`` for the capability to
  ``hs_try_putmvar``, and it will pick an arbitrary one.

  Picking the right capability will help avoid unnecessary context
  switches.  Ideally you should pass the capability that the thread
  that will be woken up last ran on, which you can find by calling
  ``threadCapability`` in Haskell.

* If you want to also pass some data back from the C callback to
  Haskell, this is best done by first allocating some memory in
  Haskell to receive the data, and passing the address to C, as we did
  in the above example.

* ``takeMVar`` can be interrupted by an asynchronous exception.  If
  this happens, the callback in C will still run at some point in the
  future, will still write the result, and will still call
  ``hs_try_putmvar()``.  Therefore we have to arrange that the memory
  for the result stays alive until the callback has run, so if an
  exception is thrown during ``takeMVar`` we fork another thread to
  wait for the callback and hold the memory alive using
  ``touchForeignPtr``.

For a fully working example, see
``testsuite/tests/concurrent/should_run/hs_try_putmvar001.hs`` in the
GHC source tree.

.. _ffi-floating-point:

Floating point and the FFI
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. index::
   single: Floating point; and the FFI

The standard C99 ``fenv.h`` header provides operations for inspecting
and modifying the state of the floating point unit. In particular, the
rounding mode used by floating point operations can be changed, and the
exception flags can be tested.

In Haskell, floating-point operations have pure types, and the
evaluation order is unspecified. So strictly speaking, since the
``fenv.h`` functions let you change the results of, or observe the
effects of floating point operations, use of ``fenv.h`` renders the
behaviour of floating-point operations anywhere in the program
undefined.

Having said that, we *can* document exactly what GHC does with respect
to the floating point state, so that if you really need to use
``fenv.h`` then you can do so with full knowledge of the pitfalls:

-  GHC completely ignores the floating-point environment, the runtime
   neither modifies nor reads it.

-  The floating-point environment is not saved over a normal thread
   context-switch. So if you modify the floating-point state in one
   thread, those changes may be visible in other threads. Furthermore,
   testing the exception state is not reliable, because a context switch
   may change it. If you need to modify or test the floating point state
   and use threads, then you must use bound threads
   (``Control.Concurrent.forkOS``), because a bound thread has its own
   OS thread, and OS threads do save and restore the floating-point
   state.

-  It is safe to modify the floating-point unit state temporarily during
   a foreign call, because foreign calls are never pre-empted by GHC.

.. _pinned-byte-arrays:

Pinned Byte Arrays
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A pinned byte array is one that the garbage collector is not allowed
to move. Consequently, it has a stable address that can be safely
requested with ``byteArrayContents#``. There are a handful of
primitive functions in :ghc-prim-ref:`GHC.Prim <GHC-Prim.html>`
used to enforce or check for pinnedness: ``isByteArrayPinned#``,
``isMutableByteArrayPinned#``, and ``newPinnedByteArray#``. A
byte array can be pinned as a result of three possible causes:

1. It was allocated by ``newPinnedByteArray#``.
2. It is large. Currently, GHC defines large object to be one
   that is at least as large as 80% of a 4KB block (i.e. at
   least 3277 bytes).
3. It has been copied into a compact region. The documentation
   for ``ghc-compact`` and ``compact`` describes this process.

.. [1] Prior to GHC 8.10, when passing an ``ArrayArray#`` argument
  to a foreign function, the foreign function would see a pointer
  to the ``StgMutArrPtrs`` rather than just the payload.
.. [2] In practice, the FFI should not be used for a task as simple
  as reading bytes from a ``MutableByteArray#``. Users should prefer
  ``GHC.Exts.readWord8Array#`` for this.
.. [3] As in [2]_, the FFI is not actually needed for this. ``GHC.Exts``
  includes primitives for reading from on ``ArrayArray#``.