Ivan FB eb62813af5
refactor(host): rename the host-call token to callId
"token" was overloaded (auth tokens, cgo handles, lexer tokens) and didn't say
what it is — a per-call correlation id linking an outgoing {.ffiHost.} call to
the answer that arrives later (possibly from another thread). Renamed across the
runtime (ffi_host / ffi_context), the macro, the exported C ABI (FFIHostFn,
<lib>_host_complete), the Go trampoline, and the tests; regenerated bindings.

The unrelated request-path cgo.Handle result-slot (also informally called a
"token" in go.nim comments) is left as-is — different mechanism.

16 host unit tests + the examples/host_demo Go round-trip stay green.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-14 00:40:29 +02:00
..

C bindings — native (same-process) example

Generated C headers for the timer library plus a small driver that links the library directly and calls the native (zero-serialization) ABI.

Which ABI? The library exports both ABIs from the same shared object, side by side: the native <name> symbols and the CBOR <name>_cbor symbols. Use the native (pure-C) ABI for same-process / local calls — it passes flat C structs with zero serialization. Use the CBOR ABI only for inter-process communication (a different process, or a different machine), where the data has to be serialized to cross the boundary anyway. In one address space, CBOR is pure overhead — prefer native. See ../ipc for the CBOR/IPC path.

Files

File Description
my_timer.h Native ABI: each {.ffi.} type is a plain C struct, passed by value to int <name>(ctx, cb, ud, <args…>). Results arrive on the callback. Best for same-process callers — no serialization.
my_timer_cbor.h CBOR ABI (<name>_cbor): request/response as CBOR bytes. Use this when the call crosses a process or machine boundary. See ../ipc.
example.c Native same-process driver: create → version → echo → complex → destroy.
Makefile Builds the Nim dylib (from the repo root) and the driver.

The headers are regenerated by nimble genbindings_c (run from the repo root) and overwritten each time — don't edit them by hand.

Build & run

cd examples/timer/c_bindings
make run

This compiles libmy_timer.{dylib,so} and runs ./example, which prints the library version and the round-tripped echo/complex responses. Every call is dispatched on the library's FFI thread, so the driver blocks on a condvar-backed callback for each result.

Native vs CBOR

The native path passes {.ffi.} structs as flat C-POD values (const char* for strings, { T* ptr; size_t len } for sequences, { int present; T } for options). Arguments are deep-copied across the FFI-thread boundary, so the C caller's buffers can be freed immediately after the call returns. String returns arrive as raw bytes; struct returns arrive as a typed const <Type>* in the callback (cast and read it there — it is valid only for the callback's lifetime, and the library deep-frees it afterwards, so copy out anything you need).

For the cross-process / cross-machine path, the same library is reached over a socket using the CBOR ABI — see ../ipc.