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// Native (zero-serialization, same-process) C example for the timer library.
//
// This is the in-process path: the C host links libmy_timer directly and calls
// the native `<name>` entry points, passing `{.ffi.}` types as plain C structs
// by value. No CBOR — arguments are deep-copied across the FFI thread boundary
// as flat C-POD graphs. Each call delivers its result to a callback that we
// block on with a condvar (every call is dispatched on the library's FFI
// thread, so the result is not ready until the callback fires).
//
// For the cross-process / cross-machine path (CBOR over a socket), see
// ../ipc/.
#include "my_timer.h"
#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
// --- one-shot blocking response capture -------------------------------------
typedef struct {
int ret;
char buf[2048];
size_t len;
int done;
pthread_mutex_t mu;
pthread_cond_t cv;
} Resp;
static void resp_init(Resp *r) {
memset(r, 0, sizeof(*r));
pthread_mutex_init(&r->mu, NULL);
pthread_cond_init(&r->cv, NULL);
}
// Native ABI: on RET_OK (msg, len) is the raw return value (for a string-
// returning proc, the bytes; for a struct-returning proc, its CBOR encoding);
// on RET_ERR it is the raw error text. We copy it so it outlives the callback.
static void on_result(int ret, const char *msg, size_t len, void *ud) {
Resp *r = (Resp *)ud;
pthread_mutex_lock(&r->mu);
r->ret = ret;
size_t n = len < sizeof(r->buf) - 1 ? len : sizeof(r->buf) - 1;
if (msg && n) memcpy(r->buf, msg, n);
r->buf[n] = '\0';
r->len = len;
r->done = 1;
pthread_cond_signal(&r->cv);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&r->mu);
}
static void resp_wait(Resp *r) {
pthread_mutex_lock(&r->mu);
while (!r->done) pthread_cond_wait(&r->cv, &r->mu);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&r->mu);
}
int main(void) {
// 1) Construct the library context. The ctor takes a TimerConfig by value;
// its `name: string` field is a plain `const char*` on the C side.
Resp cr;
resp_init(&cr);
TimerConfig cfg = {.name = "c-native-demo"};
void *ctx = my_timer_create(cfg, on_result, &cr);
resp_wait(&cr);
if (!ctx || cr.ret != RET_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "create failed (ret=%d): %s\n", cr.ret, cr.buf);
return 1;
}
printf("created timer ctx=%p\n", ctx);
// 2) Synchronous-shaped call: version returns a plain string, delivered raw.
Resp vr;
resp_init(&vr);
if (my_timer_version(ctx, on_result, &vr) == RET_OK) {
resp_wait(&vr);
printf("version: %s\n", vr.buf);
}
// 3) Struct param by value: EchoRequest { const char* message; int64 delayMs }.
// The library sleeps delayMs on its chronos loop, then echoes the message.
Resp er;
resp_init(&er);
EchoRequest req = {.message = "hello from C", .delayMs = 5};
if (my_timer_echo(ctx, on_result, &er, req) == RET_OK) {
resp_wait(&er);
// EchoResponse is a struct return, delivered as CBOR on the native path;
// the echoed message appears verbatim inside the payload bytes.
printf("echo ret=%d (%zu-byte response, contains \"%s\")\n", er.ret, er.len,
strstr(er.buf, "hello from C") ? "hello from C" : "<not found>");
}
// 4) Deeply nested struct: seq<struct>, seq<string>, Option<string>, Option<int>.
// Demonstrates that the whole graph is deep-copied across the boundary.
Resp xr;
resp_init(&xr);
EchoRequest msgs[2] = {
{.message = "one", .delayMs = 0},
{.message = "two", .delayMs = 0},
};
const char *tags[1] = {"demo"};
ComplexRequest creq = {
.messages = msgs,
.messages_len = 2,
.tags = tags,
.tags_len = 1,
.note_present = 1,
.note = "a note",
.retries_present = 1,
.retries = 3,
};
if (my_timer_complex(ctx, on_result, &xr, creq) == RET_OK) {
resp_wait(&xr);
printf("complex ret=%d (%zu-byte response)\n", xr.ret, xr.len);
}
// 5) Tear down the context (joins the FFI thread).
my_timer_destroy(ctx);
printf("destroyed; done.\n");
return 0;
}