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GHC.Ptr | Portability | non-portable (GHC Extensions) | Stability | internal | Maintainer | ffi@haskell.org |
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Description |
The Ptr and FunPtr types and operations.
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Synopsis |
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Documentation |
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data Ptr a |
A value of type Ptr a represents a pointer to an object, or an
array of objects, which may be marshalled to or from Haskell values
of type a.
The type a will often be an instance of class
Storable which provides the marshalling operations.
However this is not essential, and you can provide your own operations
to access the pointer. For example you might write small foreign
functions to get or set the fields of a C struct. | Constructors | | Instances | |
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nullPtr :: Ptr a |
The constant nullPtr contains a distinguished value of Ptr
that is not associated with a valid memory location. |
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castPtr :: Ptr a -> Ptr b |
The castPtr function casts a pointer from one type to another. |
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plusPtr :: Ptr a -> Int -> Ptr b |
Advances the given address by the given offset in bytes. |
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alignPtr :: Ptr a -> Int -> Ptr a |
Given an arbitrary address and an alignment constraint,
alignPtr yields the next higher address that fulfills the
alignment constraint. An alignment constraint x is fulfilled by
any address divisible by x. This operation is idempotent. |
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minusPtr :: Ptr a -> Ptr b -> Int |
Computes the offset required to get from the first to the second
argument. We have
p2 == p1 `plusPtr` (p2 `minusPtr` p1) |
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data FunPtr a |
A value of type FunPtr a is a pointer to a function callable
from foreign code. The type a will normally be a foreign type,
a function type with zero or more arguments where
- the argument types are marshallable foreign types,
i.e. Char, Int, Double, Float,
Bool, Int8, Int16, Int32,
Int64, Word8, Word16,
Word32, Word64, Ptr a, FunPtr a,
StablePtr a or a renaming of any of these
using newtype.
- the return type is either a marshallable foreign type or has the form
IO t where t is a marshallable foreign type or ().
A value of type FunPtr a may be a pointer to a foreign function,
either returned by another foreign function or imported with a
a static address import like
foreign import ccall "stdlib.h &free"
p_free :: FunPtr (Ptr a -> IO ())
or a pointer to a Haskell function created using a wrapper stub
declared to produce a FunPtr of the correct type. For example:
type Compare = Int -> Int -> Bool
foreign import ccall "wrapper"
mkCompare :: Compare -> IO (FunPtr Compare)
Calls to wrapper stubs like mkCompare allocate storage, which
should be released with freeHaskellFunPtr when no
longer required.
To convert FunPtr values to corresponding Haskell functions, one
can define a dynamic stub for the specific foreign type, e.g.
type IntFunction = CInt -> IO ()
foreign import ccall "dynamic"
mkFun :: FunPtr IntFunction -> IntFunction | Constructors | | Instances | |
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nullFunPtr :: FunPtr a |
The constant nullFunPtr contains a
distinguished value of FunPtr that is not
associated with a valid memory location. |
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castFunPtr :: FunPtr a -> FunPtr b |
Casts a FunPtr to a FunPtr of a different type. |
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castFunPtrToPtr :: FunPtr a -> Ptr b |
Casts a FunPtr to a Ptr.
Note: this is valid only on architectures where data and function
pointers range over the same set of addresses, and should only be used
for bindings to external libraries whose interface already relies on
this assumption. |
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castPtrToFunPtr :: Ptr a -> FunPtr b |
Casts a Ptr to a FunPtr.
Note: this is valid only on architectures where data and function
pointers range over the same set of addresses, and should only be used
for bindings to external libraries whose interface already relies on
this assumption. |
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Produced by Haddock version 0.6 |