Camlidl user's manual
Version 1.05

Xavier Leroy
INRIA Rocquencourt

1  Overview

Camlidl generates stub code for interfacing Caml with C (as described in chapter ``Interfacing with C'' of the Objective Caml reference manual) from an IDL description of the C functions to be made available in Caml. Thus, Camlidl automates the most tedious task in interfacing C libraries with Caml programs. It can also be used to interface Caml programs with other languages, as long as those languages have a well-defined C interface.

In addition, Camlidl provides basic support for COM interfaces and components. It supports both using COM components (usually written in C++ or C) from Caml programs, and packaging Caml objects as COM components that can then be used from C++ or C.

1.1  What is IDL?

IDL stands for Interface Description Language. This is a generic term for a family of small languages that have been developed to provide type specifications for libraries written in C and C++. Those languages resembles C declarations (as found in C header files), with extra annotations to provide more precise types for the arguments and results of the functions.

The particular IDL used by Camlidl is inspired by Microsoft's IDL, which itself is an extension of the IDL found in DCE (The Open Group's Distributed Common Environment). The initial motivation for those IDLs was to automate the generation of stub code for remote procedure calls and network objects, where the arguments to the function are marshaled at the calling site, then sent across the network or through interprocess communications to a server process, which unmarshals the arguments, compute the function application, marshal the results, sends them back to the calling site, where they are unmarshaled and returned to the caller. IDLs were also found to be very useful for inter-language communications, since the same type information that guides the generation of marshaling stubs can be used to generate stubs to convert between the data representations of several languages.

1.2  What is COM?

COM is Microsoft's Common Object Model. It provides a set of programming conventions as well as system support for packaging C++ objects as executable components that can be used in other programs, either by dynamic linking of the component inside the program, or through interprocess or internetwork communications between the program and a remote server. COM components implement one or several interfaces, (similar to Caml object types or Java interfaces) identified by unique 128-bit interface identifiers (IIDs). COM specifies a standard protocol for reference counting of components, and for asking a component which interfaces it implements.

While the full range of COM services and third-party components is available only on Microsoft's Windows operating systems, the basic COM conventions can also be used on Unix and other operating systems to exchange objects between Caml and C or C++. Of particular interest is the encapsulation of Caml objects as COM components, which can then be used inside larger C or C++ applications; those applications do not need to know anything about Caml: they just call the component methods as if they were C++ methods or C functions, without knowing that they are actually implemented in Caml.

For more information about COM, see for instance Inside COM by Dale Rogerson (Microsoft Press), or the Microsoft developer Web site.

2  IDL syntax

This section describes the syntax of IDL files. IDL syntax is very close to that of C declarations, with extra attributes between brackets adding information to the C types. The following example should give the flavor of the syntax:
        int f([in,string] char * msg);
This reads: ``f is a function taking a character string as input and returning an int''.

2.1  Lexical conventions

Blanks.
Space, newline, horizontal tabulation, carriage return, line feed and form feed are considered as blanks. Blanks are ignored, but they separate adjacent tokens.

Comments.
Both C-style comments /* ... */ and Java-style comments // ... are supported. C-style comments are introduced by /* and terminated by */. Java-style comments are introduced by // and extend to the end of the line. Comments are treated as blank characters. Comments do not occur inside string or character literals. Nested C-style comments are not supported.

Identifiers.
Identifiers have the same syntax as in C.
ident ::= (A ... Z | a ... z | _) {A ... Z | a ... z | 0 ... 9 | _}

Literals.
Integer literals, character literals and string literals have the same syntax as in C.
integer ::= [-] {0 ... 9} [-] 0x {0 ... 9 | a ... f | A ... F} [-] 0 {0 ... 7}
character ::= ' (regular-char | escape-char) '
string ::= " {regular-char | escape-char} "
escape-char ::= \ (b| n| r| t)
  | \ (0...7) [0...7] [0...7]

UUID.
Unique identifiers are composed of 16 hexadecimal digits, in groups of 8, 4, 4, 4 and 12, separated by dashes.
uuid ::= hex8 -  hex4 -  hex4 -  hex4 -  hex4  hex4  hex4
hex ::= 0 ... 9 | a ... f | A ... F

2.2  Limited expressions

Limited expressions are similar to C expressions, with the omission of assignment operators (=, +=, etc), and the addition of the unsigned (logical) right shift operator >>>. Operators have the same precedences and associativities as in C. They are listed below in decreasing priority order.
lexpr ::= ident
  | integer
  | character
  | true
  | false
  | string
  | sizeof (  type-expr )
  | ( lexpr )
  | lexpr  (. | ->) ident
  | ( type-expr )  lexpr
  | (&| *| !| ~| -| +) lexpr
  | lexpr  (*| /| %) lexpr
  | lexpr  (+| -) lexpr
  | lexpr  (<<| >>
  | >>>) lexpr
  | lexpr  (==| !=| >=| <=| >| <)
  | lexpr  (&| ^| |) lexpr
  | lexpr  (&&| ||) lexpr
  | lexpr ?  lexpr :  lexpr
Constant limited expressions, written const-lexpr below, can only reference identifiers that are bound by the IDL const declaration.

2.3  Attributes


attributes ::= [ attribute  { , attribute } ]
attribute ::= ident
  | ident (  [lexpr]  { , [lexpr] } )
  | ident (  uuid )
  | attribute *
  | * attribute
Attribute lists are written in brackets [...], and are always optional. Each attribute is identified by a name, and may carry optional arguments. Starred attributes apply to the element type of a pointer or array type, rather than to the pointer or array type itself. The following table summarizes the recognized attributes and their arguments.
Attribute Context where it can appear
abstract typedef
bigarray array type
blocking function declaration
camlint int or long integer type
compare(fun-name) typedef
c2ml(fun-name) typedef
errorcheck(fun-name) typedef
errorcode typedef
finalize(fun-name) typedef
fortran array type with bigarray attribute
hash(fun-name) typedef
ignore any pointer type
in function parameter
int_default( camlint| nativeint| int32| int64) interface
int32 int or long integer type
int64 int or long integer type
length_is(le1, le2,...) array type
long_default( camlint| nativeint| int32| int64) interface
managed array type with bigarray attribute
ml2c(fun-name) typedef
mlname( fun-or-field-name ) function declaration, struct field
mltype(" caml-type-expr ") typedef
nativeint int or long integer type
null_terminated array of pointers
object interface
out function parameter
pointer_default( ref| unique| ptr) interface
propget function declaration
propput function declaration
propputref function declaration
ptr any pointer type
ref any pointer type
set enum type
size_is(le1, le2,...) array type
string character array or pointer
switch_is(le) union type or pointer to union
switch_type(ty) union or pointer to union
unique any pointer, array, or bigarray type
uuid( uuid ) interface

2.4  Types and declarators

The declaration of an identifier along with its type is as in C: a type specification comes first, followed by the identifier possibly decorated with * and [...] to denote pointers and array types. For instance, int x declares an identifier x of type int, while int (*x)[] declares an identifier x that is a pointer to an array of integers.
type-spec ::= [unsigned| signed] (int| short| long| char| hyper| long long| __int64)
  | byte
  | float
  | double
  | boolean
  | void
  | ident
  | wchar_t
  | handle_t
  | struct ident
  | union ident
  | enum ident
  | struct-decl
  | union-decl
  | enum-decl
declarator ::= {*} direct-declarator
direct-declarator ::= ident
  | ( declarator )
  | direct-declarator [  [const-lexpr] ]

2.5  Structures, unions and enumerations


struct-decl ::= struct [ident] {  {field-decl} }
field-decl ::= attributes  type-spec  declarator  { , declarator } ;
union-decl ::= union [ident] {  {union-case} }
  | union [ident] switch (  type-spec  ident ) {  {union-case} }
union-case ::= {case ident :}+  [field-decl] ; default :  [field-decl] ;
enum-decl ::= enum [ident] {  enum-case  {, enum-case}  [,] }
enum-case ::= ident  [= const-lexpr]

IDL struct declarations are like those of C, with the addition of optional attributes on each field. union declarations are also as in C, except that each case of an union must be labeled by one or several case ident :. The first form of union declaration assumes that the discriminant of the union is provided separately via a switch_is annotation on the union type, while the second form encapsulates the discriminant along with the union itself (like in Pascal's record case of construct).

2.6  Function declarations


function-decl ::= attributes  type-spec  {*} ident (  params )  {quote(ident, string)}
params ::= e
  | void
  | param  { , param }
param ::= attributes  type-spec  declarator
Function declarations are like in ANSI C, with the addition of attributes on each parameter and on the function itself. Parameters must be named. The optional quote statements following the declaration are user-provided calling sequences and deallocation sequences that replaces the default sequences in the camlidl-generated stub code for the function.

2.7  Constant definitions


constant-decl ::= const attributes  type-spec  {*} ident =  const-lexpr ;
A constant declaration associates a name to a limited expression. The limited expression can refer to constant names declared earlier, but cannot refer to other kinds of identifiers. The optional attributes influence the interpretation of the type specification, e.g. const int x = 3 defines x with Caml type int, but const [int64] long x = 5 defines x with Caml type int64.

2.8  IDL files


file ::= {decl}
decl ::= function-decl ;
  | constant-decl ;
  | struct-decl ;
  | union-decl ;
  | enum-decl ;
  | typedef attributes  type-spec  declarator  { , declarator } ;
  | attributes interface  ident  [ : ident ] {  {decl} }
  | struct ident ;
  | union ident ;
  | union switch ( type-spec  ident ) ;
  | attributes interface  ident ;
  | import string ;
  | quote ( [ident ,]  string )
  | cpp_quote ( string )
An IDL file is a sequence of IDL declarations. Declarations include function declarations, constant declarations, type declarations (structs, unions, enums, as well as a C-style typedef declaration to name a type expression), and interfaces.

An interface declaration gives a name and attributes to a collection of declarations. For interfaces with the object attribute, an optional super-interface can be provided, as in interface intf :  super-intf. The name of the interface can be used as a type name in the remainder of the file.

Forward declarations of structs, unions and interfaces are supported in the usual C manner, by just giving the name of the struct, union or interface, but not its actual contents.

The import statement reads another IDL file and makes available its type and constant declarations in the remainder of the file. No code is generated for the functions and interfaces declared in the imported file. The same file can be imported several times, but is read in only the first time.

The quote ( ident ,  str ) diversion copies the string str verbatim to one of the files generated by the camlidl compiler. The ident determines the file where str is copied: it can be ml for the Caml implementation file (.ml), mli for the Caml interface file (.mli), mlmli for both Caml files, h for the C header file (.h), and c for the C source file containing the generated stub code (.c file). For backward compatibility, cpp_quote ( str ) is recognized as synonymous for quote ( h , str ).

3  The Caml-IDL mapping

This section describes how IDL types, function declarations, and interfaces are mapped to Caml types, functions and classes.

3.1  Base types


IDL type ty Caml type [[ty]]
byte, short int
int, long with [camlint] attribute int
int, long with [nativeint] attribute nativeint
int, long with [int32] attribute int32
int, long with [int64] attribute int64
hyper, long long, __int64 int64
char char
float, double float
boolean bool

(For integer types, signed and unsigned variants of the same IDL integer type translate to the same Caml type.)

Depending on the attributes, the int and long integer types are converted to one of the Caml integer types int, nativeint, int32, or int64. Values of Caml type int32 are exactly 32-bit wide and values of type int64 are exactly 64-bit wide on all platforms. Values of type nativeint have the natural word size of the platform, and are large enough to accommodate any C int or long int without loss of precision. Values of Caml type int have the natural word size of the platform minus one bit of tag, hence the conversion from IDL types int and long loses the most significant bit on 32-bit platforms. On 64-bit platforms, the conversion from int is exact, but the conversion from long loses the most significant bit.

If no explicit integer attribute is given for an int or long type, the int_default or long_default attribute of the enclosing interface, if any, determines the kind of the integer. If no int_default or long_default attribute is in scope, the kind camlint is assumed, which maps IDL int and long types to the Caml int type.

3.2  Pointers

The mapping of IDL pointer types depends on their kinds. Writing [[ty]] for the Caml type corresponding to the IDL type ty, we have:
       [ref] ty *  Þ  [[ty]]
    [unique] ty *  Þ  [[ty]] option
       [ptr] ty *  Þ  [[ty]] Com.opaque
In other terms, IDL pointers of kind ref are ignored during the mapping: [ref] ty * is mapped to the same Caml type as ty. A pointer p to a C value c = *p is translated to the Caml value corresponding to c.

IDL pointers of kind unique are mapped to an option type. The option value is None for a null pointer, and Some(v) for a non-null pointer to a C value c that translates to the ML value v.

IDL pointers of kind ptr are mapped to a Com.opaque type. This is an abstract type that encapsulates the C pointer without attempting to convert it to an ML data structure.

IDL pointers of kind ignore denote struct fields and function parameters that need not be exposed in the Caml code. Those pointers are simply set to null when converting from Caml to C, and ignored when converting from C to Caml. They cannot occur elsewhere.

If no explicit pointer kind is given, the pointer_default attribute of the enclosing interface, if any, determines the kind of the pointer. If no pointer_default attribute is in scope, the kind unique is assumed.

3.3  Arrays

IDL arrays of characters that carry the [string] attribute are mapped to the Caml string type:
IDL type ty Caml type [[ty]]
[string] char [] string
[string] unsigned char [] string
[string] signed char [] string
[string] byte [] string

Caml string values are translated to standard null-terminated C strings. Be careful about embedded null characters in the Caml string, which will be recognized as end of string by C functions.

IDL arrays carrying the [bigarray] attribute are translated to Caml ``big arrays'', as described in the next section.

All other IDL arrays are translated to ML arrays:
        ty []  Þ  [[ty]] array
For instance, double [] becomes float array. Consequently, multi-dimensional arrays are translated to Caml arrays of arrays. For instance, int [][] becomes int array array.

If the unique attribute is given, the IDL array is translated to an ML option type:
        [string,unique] char []  Þ  string option
        [unique] ty []     Þ  [[ty]] array option
As in the case of pointers of kind unique, the option value is None for a null C pointer, and Some(v) for a non-null C pointer to a C array that translates to the ML string or array v.

Conversion between a C array and an ML array proceed element by element. For the conversion from C to ML, the number of elements of the ML array is determined as follows (in the order presented): For instance, C values of IDL type [length_is(n)] double[] are mapped to Caml float array of n elements. C values of IDL type double[10] are mapped to Caml float array of 10 elements.

The length_is and size_is attributes take as argument one or several limited expressions. Each expression applies to one dimension of the array. For instance, [size_is(*dimx, *dimy)] double d[][] specifies a matrix of double whose first dimension has size *dimx and the second has size *dimy.

3.4  Big arrays

IDL arrays of integers or floats that carry the [bigarray] attribute are mapped to one of the Caml Bigarray types: Array1.t for one-dimensional arrays, Array2.t for 2-dimensional arrays, Array3.t for 3-dimensional arrays, and Genarray.t for arrays of 4 dimensions or more.

If the [fortran] attribute is given, the big array is accessed from Caml using the Fortran conventions (array indices start at 1; column-major memory layout). By default, the big array is accessed from Caml using the C conventions (array indices start at 0; row-major memory layout).

If the [managed] attribute is given on a big array type that is result type or out parameter type of a function, Caml assumes that the corresponding C array was allocated using malloc(), and is not referenced anywhere else; then, the Caml garbage collector will free the C array when the corresponding Caml big array becomes unreachable. By default, Caml assumes that result or out C arrays are statically or permanently allocated, and keeps a pointer to them during conversion to Caml big arrays, and does not free them when the Caml bigarrays become unreachable.

Finally, the [unique] attribute applies to bigarrays as to arrays, that is, it maps a null C pointer to None, and a non-null C pointer p to Some(v) where v is the ML bigarray resulting from the translation of p.

3.5  Structs

IDL structs are mapped to Caml record types. The names and types of the IDL struct fields determine the names and types of the Caml record type:
struct s { ... ; tyi idi ; ... }  becomes  type s = { ... ; idi : [[tyi]] ; ... }
Example: struct s { int n; double d[4]; } becomes type s = {n: int; d: float array}.

Exceptions to this rule are as follows:

3.6  Unions

IDL discriminated unions are translated to Caml sum types. Each case of the union corresponds to a constructor of the sum type. The constructor is constant if the union case has no associated field, otherwise has one argument corresponding to the union case field. If the union has a default case, an extra constructor Default_unionname is added to the Caml sum type, carrying an int argument (the value of the discriminating field), and possibly another argument corresponding to the default field. Examples:
union u1 { case A: int x; case B: case C: double d; case D: ; }
         becomes type u1 = A of int | B of float | C of float | D
union u2 { case A: int x; case B: double d; default: ; }
         becomes type u2 = A of int | B of float | Default_u of int
union u3 { case A: int x; default: double d; }
         becomes type u3 = A of int | Default_v of int * double
All IDL unions must be discriminated, either via the special syntax union name switch(int discr)..., or via the attribute switch_is(discr), where discr is a C l-value built from other parameters of the current function, or other fields of the current struct. Both the discriminant and the case labels must be of an integer type. Unless a default case is given, the value of the discriminant must be one of the cases of the union.

3.7  Enums

IDL enums are translated to Caml enumerated types (sum types with only constant constructors). The names of the constructors are determined by the names of the enum labels. The values attached to the enum labels are ignored. Example: enum e { A, B = 2, C = 4 } becomes type enum_e = A | B | C.

The set attribute can be applied to a named enum to denote a bitfield obtained by logical ``or'' of zero, one or several labels of the enum. The corresponding ML value is a list of zero, one or several constructors of the Caml enumerated type. Consider for instance:
enum e { A = 1, B = 2, C = 4 };
typedef [set] enum e eset;
The Caml type eset is equal to enum_e list. The C integer 6 (= B | C) is translated to the ML list [B; C]. The ML list [A; C] is translated to the C integer A | C, that is 5.

3.8  Type definitions

An IDL typedef statement is normally translated to a Caml type abbreviation. For instance, typedef [string] char * str becomes type str = string.

If the abstract attribute is given, a Caml abstract type is generated instead of a type abbreviation, thus hinding from Caml the representation of the type in question. For instance, typedef [abstract] void * handle becomes type handle. In this case, the IDL type in the typedef is ignored.

If the mltype ( " caml-type-expr " ) attribute is given, the Caml type is made equal to caml-type-expr. This is often used in conjunction with the ml2c and c2ml attributes to implement custom translation of data structures between C and ML. For instance, typedef [mltype("int list")] struct mylist_struct * mylist becomes type mylist = int list.

If the c2ml(funct-name)  and ml2c(funct-name) attributes are given, the user-provided C functions given as attributes will be called to perform Caml to C and C to Caml conversions for values of the typedef-ed type, instead of using the camlidl-generated conversion functions. This allows user-controlled translation of data structures. The prototypes of the conversion functions must be
        value c2ml(ty * input);
        void ml2c(value input, ty * output);
where ty is the name of the type defined by typedef. In other terms, the c2ml function is passed a reference to a ty and returns the corresponding Caml value, while the ml2c function is passed a Caml value as first argument and stores the corresponding C value in the ty reference passed as second argument.

If the finalize(final-fn) attribute is given in combination with the abstract attribute, the function final-fn is called when the Caml block representing a value of this typedef becomes unreachable from Caml and is reclaimed by the Caml garbage collector. Similarly, compare(compare-fn) and hash(hash-fn) attach a comparison function and a hashing function (respectively) to Caml values for this typedef. The comparison function is called when two Caml values of this typedef are compared using the generic comparisons compare, =, <, etc. The hashing function is called when Hashtbl.hash is applied to a Caml value of this typedef. The prototype of the finalization, comparison and hashing functions are:
        value final-fn(ty * x);
        int compare-fn(ty * x, ty * y);
        long hash-fn(ty * x);
That is, their arguments are passed by reference. The comparison function must return an integer that is negative, zero, or positive depending on whether its first argument is smaller, equal or greater than its second argument. The hashing function returns a suitable hash value for its argument.

If the errorcheck(fn) attribute is provided for the typedef ty, the error checking function fn is called each time a function result of type ty is converted from C to Caml. The function can then check the ty value for values indicating an error condition, and raise the appropriate exception. If in addition the errorcode attribute is provided, the conversion from C to Caml is suppressed: values of type ty are only passed to fn for error checking, then discarded.

3.9  Functions

IDL function declarations are translated to Caml functions. The parameters and results of the Caml function are determined from those of the IDL function according to the following rules: Examples:
int f([in] double x, [in] double y)             f : float -> float -> int
Two double input, one int output
void g([in] int x)                              g : int -> unit
One int input, no output
int h()                                         h : unit -> int
No input, one int result
void i([in] int x, [out] double * y)            i : int -> double
One int input, one double output (as an out parameter)
int j([in] int x, [out] double * y)             j : int -> int * double
One int input, one int output (in the result), one double output (as an out parameter)
void k([in,out,ref] int * x)                    k : int -> int
The in,out parameter is both one int input and one int output.
HRESULT l([in] int x, [out] int * res1, [out] int * res2)
                                                l : int -> int * int
HRESULT is a predefined type with the errorcode attribute, hence it is ignored. It remains one int input and two int outputs (out parameters)
void m([in] int len, [in,size_is(len)] double d[])
                                                m : float array -> int
len is a dependent parameter, hence is ignored. The only input is the double array
void n([in] int inputlen, [out] int * outputlen, 
       [in,out,size_is(inputlen),length_is(*outputlen)] double d[])
                                                n : float array -> float array
The two parameters inputlen and outputlen are dependent, hence ignored. The double array is both an input and an output.
void p([in] int dimx, [in] int dimy,
       [in,out,bigarray,size_is(dimx,dimy)] double d[][])
p : (float, Bigarray.float64_elt, Bigarray.c_layout) Bigarray.Array2.t -> unit
The two parameters dimx and dimy are dependent (determined from the dimensions of the big array argument), hence ignored. The two-dimensional array d, although marked [in,out], is a big array, hence passed as an input that will be modified in place by the C function p. The Caml function has no outputs.
Error checking:
For every output that is of a named type with the errorcheck(fn) attribute, the error checking function fn is called after the C function returns. That function is assumed to raise a Caml exception if it finds an output denoting an error.

Custom calling and deallocation sequences:
The IDL declaration for a function can optionally specify a custom calling sequence and/or a custom deallocation sequence, via quote clauses following the function declaration:
function-decl ::= attributes  type-spec  {*} ident (  params )  { quote( ident ,  string ) }
The general shape of a camlidl-generated stub function is as follows:
value caml_wrapper(value camlparam1, ..., value camlparamK)

  /* Convert the function parameters from Caml to C */
  param1 = ...;
  ...
  paramN = ...;
  /* Call the C function 'ident' */
  _res = ident(param1, ..., paramN);
  /* Convert the function result and out parameters to Caml values */
  camlres = ...;
  /* Return result to Caml */
  return camlres;

A quote(call, string ) clause causes the C statements in string to be inserted in the generated stub code instead of the default calling sequence _res = ident(param1, ..., paramN). Thus, the statements in string find the converted parameters in local variables that have the same names as the parameters in the IDL declaration, and should leave the result of the function, if any, in the local variable named _res.

A quote(dealloc, string ) clause causes the C statements in string to be inserted in the generated stub code just before the stub function returns, hence after the conversion of the C function results to Caml values. Again, the statements in string have access to the function result in the local variable named _res, and to out parameters in local variables having the same names as the parameters. Since the function results and out parameters have already been converted to Caml values, the code in string can safely deallocate the data structures they point to.

Custom calling sequences are typically used to rearrange or combine function parameters, and to perform extra error checks on the arguments and results. For instance, the Unix write system call can be specified in IDL as follows:
        int write([in] int fd,
                  [in,string,length_is(len)] char * data,
                  [in] int len,
                  [in] int ofs,
                  [in] int towrite)
          quote(call,
            " /* Validate the arguments */
              if (ofs < 0 || ofs + towrite >= len) failwith(\"write\");
              /* Perform the write */
              _res = write(fd, data + ofs, towrite);
              /* Validate the result */
              if (_res == -1) failwith(\"write\"); ");
Custom deallocation sequences are useful to free data structures dynamically allocated and returned by the C function. For instance, a C function f that returns a malloc-ed string can be specified in IDL as follows:
        [string] char * f([in] int x)
          quote(dealloc, "free(_res); ");
If the string is returned as an out parameter instead, we would write:
        void f ([in] int x, [out, string*] char ** str)
          quote(dealloc, "free(*str); ");
Blocking functions:
A function can be given the attribute blocking to indicate that it may block on an input/output operation. The generated code will then allow other Caml threads to execute concurrently with the operation.

3.10  Interfaces

IDL interfaces that do not have the object attribute are essentially ignored. That is, the declarations contained in the interface are processed as if they occurred at the top-level of the IDL file. The pointer_default, int_default and long_default attributes to the interface can be used to specify the default pointer kind and integer mappings for the declarations contained in the interface. Other attributes, as well as the name of the super-interface if any, are ignored.

IDL interfaces having the object attribute specify COM-style object interfaces. The function declarations contained in the interface specify the methods of the COM interface. Other kinds of declarations (type declarations, import statements, etc) are treated as if they occurred at the top-level of the IDL file. An optional super-interface can be given, in which case the COM interface implements the methods of the super-interface in addition to those specified in the IDL interface. Example:
[object, uuid(...)] interface IA { typedef int t; int f(int x); }
[object] interface IB : IA { import "foo.idl"; void g([string] char * s); }
This defines a type t and imports the file foo.idl as usual. In addition, two interfaces are declared: IA, containing one method f from int to int, and IB, containing two methods, f from int to int and g from string to unit.

The definition of an object interface i generates the following Caml definitions: Example: in the IA and IB example above, the following Caml definitions are generated for IA:
type iA
val iid_iA : iA Com.iid
class iA_class : iA Com.interface -> object method f : int -> int end
val use_iA : iA Com.interface -> iA_class
val make_iA : #iA_class -> iA Com.interface
For IB, we get:
type iB
val iA_of_iB : iB Com.interface -> iA Com.interface
class iB_class :
  iB Com.interface -> object inherit iA_class method g : string -> unit end
val use_iB : iB Com.interface -> iB_class
val make_iB : #iB_class -> iB Com.interface
Error handling in interfaces:
Conventionally, methods of COM interfaces always return a result of type HRESULT that says whether the method succeeded or failed, and in the latter case returns an error code to its caller.

When calling an interface method from Caml, if the method returns an HRESULT denoting failure, the exception Com.Error is raised with a message describing the error. Successful HRESULT return values are ignored. To make them available to Caml, camlidl defines the types HRESULT_bool and HRESULT_int. If those types are used as return types instead of HRESULT, failure results are mapped to Com.Error exceptions as before, but successful results are mapped to the Caml types bool and int respectively. (For HRESULT_bool, the S_OK result is mapped to true and other successful results are mapped to false. For HRESULT_int, the low 16 bits of the result code are returned as a Caml int.)

When calling a Caml method from a COM client, any exception that escapes the Caml method is mapped back to a failure HRESULT. A textual description of the uncaught exception is saved using SetLastError, and can be consulted by the COM client using GetLastError (this is the standard convention for passing extended error information in COM).

If the IDL return type of the method is not one of the HRESULT types, any exception escaping the Caml method aborts the whole program after printing a description of the exception. Hence, programmers of Caml components should either use HRESULT as result type, or make very sure that all exceptions are properly caught by the method.

4  Using camlidl

4.1  Overview

The camlidl stub generator is invoked as follows:
        camlidl options file1.idl file2.idl ...
For each file f.idl given on the command line, camlidl generates the following files: The generated .ml and .c files must be compiled and linked with the remainder of the Caml program.

4.2  Options

The following command-line options are recognized by camlidl.
-cpp
Pre-process the source IDL files with the C preprocessor. This option is set by default.

-D symbol=value
Define a preprocessor symbol. The option -Dsymbol=value is passed to the C preprocessor. The value can be omitted, as in -D symbol, and defaults to 1.

-header
Generate a C header file f.h containing C declarations for the types and functions declared in the IDL file f.c.

-I dir
Add the directory dir to the list of directories searched for .idl files, as given on the command line or recursively loaded by import statements.

-keep-labels
Keep the Caml names of record labels as specified in the IDL file. Do not prefix them with the name of the enclosing struct, even if they appear in several struct definitions.

-nocpp
Suppresses the pre-processing of source IDL files.

-no-include
By default, camlidl emits a #include "f.h" statement in the file f.c containing the generated C code. The f.h header file being included is either the one generated by camlidl -header, or generated by another tool (such as Microsoft's midl compiler) from the IDL file, or hand-written. The f.h file is assumed to provide all C type declarations needed for compiling the stub code.

The -no-include option suppresses the automatic inclusion of the f.h file. The IDL file should then include the right header files and provide the right type declarations via quote statements.

-prefix-all-labels
Prefix all Caml names of record labels with the name of the enclosing struct. The default is to prefix only those labels that could cause ambiguity because they appear in several struct definitions.

-prepro preprocessing-command
Set the command that is executed to pre-process the source IDL files. The default is the C preprocessor.

4.3  The camlidldll script

Under Windows, a bash script called camlidldll is provided to automate the construction of a DLL containing a COM component written in Caml.

The script camlidldll accepts essentially the same command-line arguments and options as the ocamlc compiler. (It also accepts .tlb type library files on the command-line; see section 6.3, ``Dispatch interfaces'', for more information on type libraries.) It produces a DLL file that encapsulates the Caml and C object files given on the command line.

Use regsvr32 /s file.dll to record the components in the system registry once it is compiled to a DLL.

5  Module Com: run-time library for COM components

type 'a interface
The type of COM components implementing interface 'a
type 'a iid
The type of the interface identifier for interface 'a
type clsid
The type of component identifiers
type 'a opaque
The type representing opaque pointers to values of type 'a. Opaque pointers are pointers with attribute ptr in IDL files.
exception Error of int * string * string
Exception raised to report Com errors. The arguments are Error(errcode, who, what). errcode is the Com error code (HRESULT code) with the high bit clear. who identifies the function or method that raised the exception. what is a message explaining the cause of the error.
val initialize : unit -> unit
Initialize the COM library. Must be called once before using any function in this module. Com.initialize can be called several times, provided that Com.uninitialize is called an equal number of times before the program exits.
val uninitialize : unit -> unit
Terminate the COM library.
val query_interface : 'a interface -> 'b iid -> 'b interface
Com.query_interface comp iid asks the component comp whether it supports the interface identified by iid. If yes, it returns the corresponding interface of the component. If not, it raises Com.Error.
type iUnknown
The type of the interface IUnknown, from which all other interfaces derive.
type iDispatch
The type of the interface IDispatch, from which all dispatch interfaces derive.
val iUnknown_of : 'a interface -> iUnknown interface
Return the IUnknown interface of the given component. This operation never fails, since all components support the IUnknown interface.
val combine : 'a interface -> 'b interface -> 'a interface
Combine the interfaces of two components. Com.combine c1 c2 returns a component that supports the union of the interfaces supported by c1 and c2. When queried for an interface, the resulting component delegates its implementation to c1 if c1 implements that interface, and otherwise delegates its implementation to c2.
val clsid : string -> clsid
Parse the string representation of a component identifier (hex8-hex4-hex4-hex4-hex12, where hexN represents N hexadecimal digits).
val create_instance : clsid -> 'a iid -> 'a interface
Com.create_instance clsid iid creates an instance of the component identified by clsid, and returns its iid interface. The implementation of the component is searched in the registry; if the component is implemented in a DLL, the DLL is loaded in memory if necessary; if the component is implemented in a separate server process, the server is started if necessary. Raise Com.Error if the component clsid cannot be found, or if it does not support interface iid.
type 'a component_factory =
  { create : unit -> 'a interface;
    clsid : clsid;
    friendly_name : string;
    ver_ind_prog_id : string;
    prog_id : string }
Informations required for registering a Caml implementation of a component. create is a function that returns a fresh instance of the component. clsid is the component identifier. friendly_name is a short description of the component (for information only). ver_ind_prog_id and prog_id are symbolic names for the component. By convention, prog_id is ver_ind_prog_id plus a version number at the end, i.e. ver_ind_prog_id is "MyCamlComponent" while prog_id is "MyCamlComponent.3".
val register_factory : 'a component_factory -> unit
Register a Caml implementation of a component. Com.register_factory f stores the component factory f in the registry. Other programs can then create instances of the component by calling CreateInstance from C and C++ or Com.create_instance from Caml.
type hRESULT_int = int
type hRESULT_bool = bool
type bSTR = string
The Caml types corresponding to the IDL types HRESULT_int, HRESULT_bool and BSTR, respectively.

6  Hints on writing IDL files

6.1  Writing an IDL file for a C library

When writing an IDL file for a C library that doesn't have an IDL interface already, the include files for that library are a good starting point: just copy the relevant type and functin declarations to the IDL file, then annotate them with IDL attributes to describe more precisely their actual behavior. The documentation of the library must be read carefully to determine the mode of function parameters (in, out, inout), the actual sizes of arrays, etc.

The type definitions in the IDL file need not correspond exactly with those in the include files. Often, a cleaner Caml interface can be obtained by omitting irrelevant struct fields, or changing their types. For instance, the Unix library functions for reading library entries may use the following structure:
        struct dirent {
            long int d_ino;
            __off_t d_off;
            unsigned short int d_reclen;
            unsigned char d_type;
            char d_name[256];
        };
Of those fields, only d_name and d_ino are of interest to the user; the other fields are internal information for the library functions, are not specified in the POSIX specs, and therefore must not be used. Thus, in the IDL file, you should declare:
        struct dirent {
            long int d_ino;
            char d_name[256];
        };
Thus, the Caml code will have type struct_dirent = {d_ino: int; d_name: string} as desired. However, the generated stub code, being compiled against the ``true'' definition of struct dirent, will find those two fields at the correct offsets in the actual struct.

Special attention must be paid to integer fields or variables. By default, integer IDL types are mapped to the Caml type int, which is convenient to use in Caml code, but loses one bit when converting from a C long integer, and may lose one bit (on 32-bit platforms) when converting from a C int integer. When the range of values represented by the C integer is small enough, this loss is acceptable. Otherwise, you should use the attributes nativeint, int32 or int64 so that integer IDL types are mapped to one of the Caml boxed integer types. (We recommend that you use int32 or int64 for integers that are specified as being exactly 32 bit wide or 64 bit wide, and nativeint for unspecified int or long integers.)

Yet another possibility is to declare certain integer fields or variables as double in the IDL file, so that they are represented by float in Caml, and all 32 bits of the integer are preserved in Caml. For instance, the Unix function to get the current type is declared as
        time_t time(time_t * t);
where time_t is usually defined as long. We can nonetheless pretend (in the IDL file) that time returns a double:
        double time() quote(" _res = time(NULL); ");
This way, time will have the Caml type unit -> float. Again, the stub code ``knows'' that time actually returns an integer, and therefore will insert the right integer-float coercions.

6.2  Sharing IDL files between MIDL and CamlIDL

The Microsoft software development kit provides a number of IDL files describing various libraries and components. In its current state, camlidl cannot exploit those files directly: they use many (often poorly documented) Microsoft IDL features that are not implemented yet in camlidl; symmetrically, camlidl introduces several new annotations that are not recognized by Microsoft's midl compiler. So, significant editing work on the IDL files is required.

The C preprocessor can be used to alleviate the camlidl-midl incompatibilities: camlidl defines the preprocessor symbol CAMLIDL when preprocessing its input files, while midl does not. Hence, one can bracket incompatible definitions in #ifdef CAMLIDL ... #else ... #endif. Along these lines, a C preprocessor header file, camlidlcompat.h, is provided: it uses #define to remove camlidl-specific attributes when compiling with midl, and to remove midl-specific attributes when compiling with camlidl. Thus, an IDL file compatible with both midl and camlidl would look like this:
        #include <camlidlcompat.h>

        #ifndef CAMLIDL
        import "unknwn.idl";    // imports specific to MIDL
        import "oaidl.idl";
        #endif
        import "mymodule.idl";  // imports common to MIDL and CamlIDL

        typedef [abstract,marshal_as(int)] void * ptr;

        ...

        #ifndef CAMLIDL
        [...] library MyTypeLib {
          importlib("stdole32.tlb");
          [...] coclass MyComponent { [default] interface IX; }
        }
        #endif
Notice that since camlidl doesn't handle type libraries, the type library part of an midl file must be enclosed in #ifndef CAMLIDL.

6.3  Dispatch interfaces and type libraries

A dispatch interface, in COM lingo, is an interface that supports dynamic, interpreted dispatch of method interfaces. This form of interpreted dispatch is used by Visual Basic and other scripting languages to perform calls to methods of COM components.

CamlIDL provides minimal support for dispatch interfaces. To equip a Caml component with a dispatch interface (thus making it callable from Visual Basic), you need to do the following:
  1. Use IDispatch instead of IUnknown as the super-interface of the component's interfaces.
  2. Write a type library for your component and compile it using midl. A type library is a run-time representation of the interfaces supported by an object. The midl compiler can generate a type library from the IDL description of the component, enriched with some special-purpose declarations (the library and coclass statements). Refer to the documentation of midl for more information.
  3. Pass the type library files (.tlb files) generated by midl as extra arguments to camlidldll when generating the DLL for your Caml component.

7  Release notes

Here are some caveats and open issues that apply to the current release.

Deallocation of function results and out parameters:
If a C function dynamically allocates some of its outputs (either returned or stored in out parameters), its IDL declaration must contain a quote(dealloc, string ) clause to properly free the space occupied by those outputs after they have been converted to Caml. Otherwise, memory leaks will occur. (The only exception is results and output parameters of type [bigarray,managed] ty[], where the Caml garbage collector takes care of deallocation.)

This does not conform to the MIDL and COM specifications, which say that space for out data structures must be allocated with CoTaskMemAlloc by the callee, and automatically freed using CoTaskMemFree by the generated stub code. (The specs don't say what happens with the return value of the function.) However, there are many functions in Win32 (not to mention the Unix world) that do not follow this convention, and return data structures (e.g. strings) that are statically allocated, or require special deallocation functions. Hence, camlidl leaves deallocation of outputs entirely under user control.

Allocation and deallocation of in,out parameters:
For in,out parameters, the MIDL/COM rules are that the caller (the stub code) should allocate the inputs, the callee should free them and allocate again its outputs, and the caller should free the outputs. As explained above, camlidl-generated stubs don't automatically free the outputs. Worse, the inputs passed to the functions are allocated partially on the stack and partially in the heap (using CoTaskMemAlloc), so the callee may perform an incorrect free on a stack-allocated argument. The best thing to do is avoid in,out parameters entirely, and split them into one in and one out parameter.

Reference-counting of COM interfaces:
Caml finalized objects are used to call Release automatically on COM interfaces that become unreachable. The reference counting of interfaces passed as in and out parameters is correctly implemented. However, in,out parameters that are interfaces are not correctly handled. Again, avoid in,out parameters.

COM support:
The support for COM is currently quite small. COM components registered in the system registry can be imported via Com.create_instance. Components written in Caml can be exported as DLLs, but not yet as standalone servers. Preliminary support for dispatch interfaces is available, however many of the data types used in the Automation framework are not supported yet (e.g. SAFEARRAY).


This document was translated from LATEX by HEVEA.