Djinni is a tool for generating cross-language type declarations and interface bindings. It's
designed to connect C++ with either Java or Objective-C. Python support is available in an experimental version on the python
branch.
We at Dropbox use Djinni to interface cross-platform C++ library code with platform-specific Java and Objective-C on Android and iOS.
We announced Djinni at CppCon 2014. You can see the slides and video. For more info about Djinni and how others are using it, check out the community links at the end of this document.
- Generates parallel C++, Java and Objective-C type definitions from a single interface description file.
- Supports the intersection of the three core languages' primitive types, and user-defined enums, records, and interfaces.
- Generates interface code allowing bidirectional calls between C++ and Java (with JNI) or Objective-C (with Objective-C++).
- Can autogenerate comparator functions (equality, ordering) on data types.
Djinni generates code based on interface definitions in an IDL file. An IDL file can contain three kinds of declarations: enums, records, and interfaces.
- Enums become C++ enum classes, Java enums, or ObjC
NS_ENUM
s. - Flags become C++ enum classes with convenient bit-oriented operators, Java enums with
EnumSet
, or ObjCNS_OPTIONS
. - Records are pure-data value objects.
- Interfaces are objects with defined methods to call (in C++, passed by
shared_ptr
). Djinni produces code allowing an interface implemented in C++ to be transparently used from ObjC or Java, and vice versa.
Djinni's input is an interface description file. Here's an example:
# Multi-line comments can be added here. This comment will be propagated
# to each generated definition.
my_enum = enum {
option1;
option2;
option3;
}
my_flags = flags {
flag1;
flag2;
flag3;
no_flags = none;
all_flags = all;
}
my_record = record {
id: i32;
info: string;
store: set<string>;
hash: map<string, i32>;
values: list<another_record>;
# Comments can also be put here
# Constants can be included
const string_const: string = "Constants can be put here";
const min_value: another_record = {
key1 = 0,
key2 = ""
};
}
another_record = record {
key1: i32;
key2: string;
} deriving (eq, ord)
# This interface will be implemented in C++ and can be called from any language.
my_cpp_interface = interface +c {
method_returning_nothing(value: i32);
method_returning_some_type(key: string): another_record;
static get_version(): i32;
# Interfaces can also have constants
const version: i32 = 1;
}
# This interface will be implemented in Java and ObjC and can be called from C++.
my_client_interface = interface +j +o {
log_string(str: string): bool;
}
Djinni files can also include each other. Adding the line:
@import "relative/path/to/filename.djinni"
at the beginning of a file will simply include another file. Child file paths are
relative to the location of the file that contains the @import. Two different djinni files
cannot define the same type. @import
behaves like #include
with #pragma once
in C++, or
like ObjC's #import
: if a file is included multiple times through different paths, then it
will only be processed once.
When the Djinni file(s) are ready, from the command line or a bash script you can run:
src/run \
--java-out JAVA_OUTPUT_FOLDER \
--java-package com.example.jnigenpackage \
--java-cpp-exception DbxException \ # Choose between a customized C++ exception in Java and java.lang.RuntimeException (the default).
--ident-java-field mFooBar \ # Optional, this adds an "m" in front of Java field names
\
--cpp-out CPP_OUTPUT_FOLDER \
\
--jni-out JNI_OUTPUT_FOLDER \
--ident-jni-class NativeFooBar \ # This adds a "Native" prefix to JNI class
\
--objc-out OBJC_OUTPUT_FOLDER \
--objc-type-prefix DB \ # Apple suggests Objective-C classes have a prefix for each defined type.
\
--objcpp-out OBJC_OUTPUT_FOLDER \
\
--idl MY_PROJECT.djinni
Some other options are also available, such as --cpp-namespace
that put generated C++ code into the namespace specified. For a list of all options, run
src/run --help
Sample generated code is in the example/generated-src/
and test-suite/generated-src/
directories of this distribution.
Note that if a language's output folder is not specified, that language will not be generated.
For more information, run run --help
to see all command line arguments available.
The following headers / code will be generated for each defined type:
Type | C++ header | C++ source | Java | JNI header | JNI source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Enum/Flags | my_enum.hpp | MyEnum.java | NativeMyEnum.hpp | NativeMyEnum.cpp | |
Record | my_record[_base].hpp | my_record[_base].cpp (+) | MyRecord[Base].java | NativeMyRecord.hpp | NativeMyRecord.cpp |
Interface | my_interface.hpp | my_interface.cpp (+) | MyInterface.java | NativeMyInterface.hpp | NativeMyInterface.cpp |
(+) Generated only for types that contain constants.
Add all generated source files to your build target, as well as the contents of
support-lib/java
.
JNI stands for Java Native Interface, an extension of the Java language to allow interop with native (C/C++) code or libraries. Complete documentation on JNI is available at: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/jni/spec/jniTOC.html
For each type, built-in (list
, string
, etc.) or user-defined, Djinni produces a translator
class with a toJava
and fromJava
function to translate back and forth.
Application code is responsible for the initial load of the JNI library. Add a static block somewhere in your code:
System.loadLibrary("YourLibraryName");
// The name is specified in Android.mk / build.gradle / Makefile, depending on your build system.
If you package your native library in a jar, you can also use com.dropbox.djinni.NativeLibLoader
to help unpack and load your lib(s). See the Localhost README
for details.
When a native library is called, JNI calls a special function called JNI_OnLoad
. If you use
Djinni for all JNI interface code, include support_lib/jni/djinni_main.cpp
; if not,
you'll need to add calls to your own JNI_OnLoad
and JNI_OnUnload
functions. See
support-lib/jni/djinni_main.cpp
for details.
Generated files for Objective-C / C++ are as follows (assuming prefix is DB
):
Type | C++ header | C++ source | Objective-C files | Objective-C++ files |
---|---|---|---|---|
Enum/Flags | my_enum.hpp | DBMyEnum.h | ||
Record | my_record[_base].hpp | my_record[_base].cpp (+) | DBMyRecord[Base].h | DBMyRecord[Base]+Private.h |
DBMyRecord[Base].mm (++) | DBMyRecord[Base]+Private.mm | |||
Interface | my_interface.hpp | my_interface.cpp (+) | DBMyInterface.h | DBMyInterface+Private.h |
DBMyInterface+Private.mm |
(+) Generated only for types that contain constants.
(++) Generated only for types with derived operations and/or constants. These have .mm
extensions to allow non-trivial constants.
Add all generated files to your build target, as well as the contents of support-lib/objc
.
Note that +Private
files can only be used with ObjC++ source (other headers are pure ObjC) and are not required by Objective-C users of your interface.
Enums are translated to C++ enum class
es with underlying type int
, ObjC NS_ENUM
s with
underlying type NSInteger
, and Java enums.
Flags are translated to C++ enum class
es with underlying type unsigned
and a generated set
of overloaded bitwise operators for convenience, ObjC NS_OPTIONS
with underlying type
NSUInteger
, and Java EnumSet<>
. Contrary to the above enums, the enumerants of flags represent
single bits instead of integral values.
When specifying a flags
type in your IDL file you can assign special semantics to options:
my_flags = flags {
flag1;
flag2;
flag3;
no_flags = none;
all_flags = all;
}
In the above example the elements marked with none
and all
are given special meaning.
In C++ and ObjC the no_flags
option is generated with a value that has no bits set (i.e. 0
),
and all_flags
is generated as a bitwise-or combination of all other values. In Java these
special options are not generated as one can just use EnumSet.noneOf()
and EnumSet.allOf()
.
Records are data objects. In C++, records contain all their elements by value, including other records (so a record cannot contain itself).
The available data types for a record, argument, or return value are:
- Boolean (
bool
) - Primitives (
i8
,i16
,i32
,i64
,f32
,f64
). - Strings (
string
) - Binary (
binary
). This is implemented asstd::vector<uint8_t>
in C++,byte[]
in Java, andNSData
in Objective-C. - Date (
date
). This ischrono::system_clock::time_point
in C++,Date
in Java, andNSDate
in Objective-C. - List (
list<type>
). This isvector<T>
in C++,ArrayList
in Java, andNSArray
in Objective-C. Primitives in a list will be boxed in Java and Objective-C. - Set (
set<type>
). This isunordered_set<T>
in C++,HashSet
in Java, andNSSet
in Objective-C. Primitives in a set will be boxed in Java and Objective-C. - Map (
map<typeA, typeB>
). This isunordered_map<K, V>
in C++,HashMap
in Java, andNSDictionary
in Objective-C. Primitives in a map will be boxed in Java and Objective-C. - Enumerations / Flags
- Optionals (
optional<typeA>
). This isstd::experimental::optional<T>
in C++11, object / boxed primitive reference in Java (which can benull
), and object / NSNumber strong reference in Objective-C (which can benil
). - Other record types. This is generated with a by-value semantic, i.e. the copy method will deep-copy the contents.
To support extra fields and/or methods, a record can be "extended" in any language. To extend
a record in a language, you can add a +c
(C++), +j
(Java), or +o
(ObjC) flag after the
record tag. The generated type will have a Base
suffix, and you should create a derived type
without the suffix that extends the record type.
The derived type must be constructible in the same way as the Base
type. Interfaces will
always use the derived type.
For record types, Haskell-style "deriving" declarations are supported to generate some common methods. Djinni is capable of generating equality and order comparators, implemented as operator overloading in C++ and standard comparison functions in Java / Objective-C.
Things to note:
- All fields in the record are compared in the order they appear in the record declaration. If you need to add a field later, make sure the order is correct.
- Ordering comparison is not supported for collection types, optionals, and booleans.
- To compare records containing other records, the inner record must derive at least the same types of comparators as the outer record.
+c
interfaces (implementable only in C++) can have methods flagged with the special keywords const and static which have special effects in C++:
special_methods = interface +c { const accessor_method(); static factory_method(); }
const
methods will be declared as const in C++, though this cannot be enforced on callers in other languages, which lack this feature.static
methods will become a static method of the C++ class, which can be called from other languages without an object. This is often useful for factory methods to act as a cross-language constructor.
When an interface implemented in C++ throws a std::exception
, it will be translated to a
java.lang.RuntimeException
in Java or an NSException
in Objective-C. The what()
message
will be translated as well.
Constants can be defined within interfaces and records. In Java and C++ they are part of the generated class; and in Objective-C, constant names are globals with the name of the interface/record prefixed. Example:
record_with_const = record +c +j +o { const const_value: i32 = 8; }
will be RecordWithConst::CONST_VALUE
in C++, RecordWithConst.CONST_VALUE
in Java, and
RecordWithConstConstValue
in Objective-C.
When generating the interface for your project and wish to make it available to other users in all of C++/Objective-C/Java you can tell Djinni to generate a special YAML file as part of the code generation process. This file then contains all the information Djinni requires to include your types in a different project. Instructing Djinni to create these YAML files is controlled by the following arguments:
--yaml-out
: The output folder for YAML files (Generator disabled if unspecified).--yaml-out-file
: If specified all types are merged into a single YAML file instead of generating one file per type (relative to--yaml-out
).--yaml-prefix
: The prefix to add to type names stored in YAML files (default:""
).
Such a YAML file looks as follows:
---
name: mylib_record1
typedef: 'record +c deriving(eq, ord)'
params: []
prefix: 'mylib'
cpp:
typename: '::mylib::Record1'
header: '"MyLib/Record1.hpp"'
byValue: false
objc:
typename: 'MLBRecord1'
header: '"MLB/MLBRecord1.h"'
boxed: 'MLBRecord1'
pointer: true
hash: '%s.hash'
objcpp:
translator: '::mylib::djinni::objc::Record1'
header: '"mylib/djinni/objc/Record1.hpp"'
java:
typename: 'com.example.mylib.Record1'
boxed: 'com.example.mylib.Record1'
reference: true
generic: true
hash: '%s.hashCode()'
jni:
translator: '::mylib::djinni::jni::Record1'
header: '"Duration-jni.hpp"'
typename: jobject
typeSignature: 'Lcom/example/mylib/Record1;'
---
name: mylib_interface1
typedef: 'interface +j +o'
(...)
---
name: mylib_enum1
typedef: 'enum'
(...)
Each document in the YAML file describes one extern type.
A full documentation of all fields is available in example/example.yaml
. You can also check
the files test-suite/djinni/date.yaml
and test-suite/djinni/duration.yaml
for some
real working examples of what you can do with it.
To use a library type in your project simply include it in your IDL file and refer to it using its name identifier:
@extern "mylib.yaml"
client_interface = interface +c {
foo(): mylib_record1;
}
These files can be created by hand as long as you follow the required format. This allows you
to support types not generated by Djinni. See test-suite/djinni/duration.yaml
and the
accompanying translators in test-suite/handwritten-src/cpp/Duration-objc.hpp
and
test-suite/handwritten-src/cpp/Duration-jni.hpp
for an advanced example. Handwritten
translators implement the following concept:
// For C++ <-> Objective-C
struct Record1
{
using CppType = ::mylib::Record1;
using ObjcType = MLBRecord1*;
static CppType toCpp(ObjcType o) { return /* your magic here */; }
static ObjcType fromCpp(CppType c) { return /* your magic here */; }
// Option 1: use this if no boxing is required
using Boxed = Record1;
// Option 2: or this if you do need dedicated boxing behavior
struct Boxed
{
using ObjcType = MLBRecord1Special*;
static CppType toCpp(ObjcType o) { return /* your magic here */; }
static ObjcType fromCpp(CppType c) { return /* your magic here */; }
}
};
// For C++ <-> JNI
#include "djinni_support.hpp"
struct Record1
{
using CppType = ::mylib::Record1;
using JniType = jobject;
static CppType toCpp(JniType j) { return /* your magic here */; }
// The return type *must* be LocalRef<T> if T is not a primitive!
static ::djinni::LocalRef<jobject> JniType fromCpp(CppType c) { return /* your magic here */; }
using Boxed = Record1;
};
For interface
classes the CppType
alias is expected to be a std::shared_ptr<T>
.
Be sure to put the translators into representative and distinct namespaces.
If your type is generic the translator takes the same number of template parameters. At usage each is instantiated with the translators of the respective type argument.
template<class A, class B>
struct Record1
{
using CppType = ::mylib::Record1<typename A::CppType, typename B::CppType>;
using ObjcType = MLBRecord1*;
static CppType toCpp(ObjcType o)
{
// Use A::toCpp() and B::toCpp() if necessary
return /* your magic here */;
}
static ObjcType fromCpp(CppType c)
{
// Use A::fromCpp() and B::fromCpp() if necessary
return /* your magic here */;
}
using Boxed = Record1;
};
Djinni does not permit custom constructors for records or interfaces, since there would be no way to implement them in Java except by manually editing the autogenerated file. Instead, use extended records or static functions.
Djinni supports overridable formats for most generated filenames and identifiers. The complete
list can found by invoking Djinni with --help
. The format is specified by formatting the
word FooBar in the desired style:
FOO_BAR
->GENERATED_IDENT
mFooBar
->mGeneratedIdent
FooBar
->GeneratedIdent
In Djinni, i8 through i64 are all used with fixed length. The C++ builtin int
, long
, etc
and Objective-C NSInteger
are not used because their length varies by architecture. Unsigned
integers are not included because they are not available in Java.
Run make test
to invoke the test suite, found in the test-suite subdirectory. It will build and run Java code on a local JVMy, plus Objective-C on an iOS simulator. The latter will only work on a Mac with Xcode.
The djinni_jar
target of the main Makefile
creates a standalone .jar
.
This uses the sbt assembly plugin under the hoods.
Simply call this target from the root directory:
make djinni_jar
This will produce a .jar
file inside the src/target/scala_<SCALA_VERSION>/djinni-assembly-<VERSION>.jar
.
You can move and use it as any other executable .jar
.
Assuming the .jar
is located at $DJINNI_JAR_DIR
its version equals 0.1-SNAPSHOT
:
# Example
java -jar $DJINNI_JAR_DIR/djinni-assembly-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar \
--java-out "$temp_out/java" \
--java-package $java_package \
--java-class-access-modifier "package" \
--java-nullable-annotation "javax.annotation.CheckForNull" \
--java-nonnull-annotation "javax.annotation.Nonnull" \
--ident-java-field mFooBar \
\
--cpp-out "$temp_out/cpp" \
--cpp-namespace textsort \
--ident-cpp-enum-type foo_bar \
\
--jni-out "$temp_out/jni" \
--ident-jni-class NativeFooBar \
--ident-jni-file NativeFooBar \
\
--objc-out "$temp_out/objc" \
--objcpp-out "$temp_out/objc" \
--objc-type-prefix TXS \
--objc-swift-bridging-header "TextSort-Bridging-Header" \
\
--idl "$in"
Note: The all
target of the main Makefile
includes the djinni_jar
target.
The ios-build-support-lib.sh
helps you to build an universal static library for iOS platforms.
It uses the platform file of the ios-cmake repository.
It basically creates one universal static library per IOS_PLATFORM
variable and uses lipo
to merge all the files in one.
There is basically two variables you would like to modify:
-
BUILD_APPLE_ARCHITECTURES
: Specifies whichIOS_PLATFORM
to build. For more informations, take a look at https://github.com/leetal/ios-cmake. -
ENABLE_BITCODE
: enable/disable the bitcode generation.
- Join the discussion with other developers at the Mobile C++ Slack Community
- There are a set of tutorials for building a cross-platform app using Djinni.
- mx3 is an example project demonstrating use of Djinni and other tools.
- Slides and video from the CppCon 2014 talk where we introduced Djinni.
- Slides and video from the CppCon 2015 about Djinni implementation techniques, and the addition of Python.
- You can see a CppCon 2014 talk by app developers at Dropbox about their cross-platform experiences.
- Kannan Goundan
- Tony Grue
- Derek He
- Steven Kabbes
- Jacob Potter
- Iulia Tamas
- Andrew Twyman
- Xianwen Chen -
[email protected]
- Andrew Twyman -
[email protected]
- Jacob Potter -
[email protected]