Struct bindgen::Builder [−][src]
Configure and generate Rust bindings for a C/C++ header.
This is the main entry point to the library.
use bindgen::builder; // Configure and generate bindings. let bindings = builder().header("path/to/input/header") .allowlist_type("SomeCoolClass") .allowlist_function("do_some_cool_thing") .generate()?; // Write the generated bindings to an output file. bindings.write_to_file("path/to/output.rs")?;
Enums
Bindgen can map C/C++ enums into Rust in different ways. The way bindgen maps enums depends on the pattern passed to several methods:
For each C enum, bindgen tries to match the pattern in the following order:
- Constified enum module
- Bitfield enum
- Newtype enum
- Rustified enum
If none of the above patterns match, then bindgen will generate a set of Rust constants.
Clang arguments
Extra arguments can be passed to with clang:
clang_arg()
: takes a single argumentclang_args()
: takes an iterator of argumentsBINDGEN_EXTRA_CLANG_ARGS
environment variable: whitespace separate environment variable of arguments
Clang arguments specific to your crate should be added via the
clang_arg()
/clang_args()
methods.
End-users of the crate may need to set the BINDGEN_EXTRA_CLANG_ARGS
environment variable to
add additional arguments. For example, to build against a different sysroot a user could set
BINDGEN_EXTRA_CLANG_ARGS
to --sysroot=/path/to/sysroot
.
Implementations
impl Builder
[src]
pub fn command_line_flags(&self) -> Vec<String>ⓘ
[src]
Generates the command line flags use for creating Builder
.
pub fn header<T: Into<String>>(self, header: T) -> Builder
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Add an input C/C++ header to generate bindings for.
This can be used to generate bindings to a single header:
let bindings = bindgen::Builder::default() .header("input.h") .generate() .unwrap();
Or you can invoke it multiple times to generate bindings to multiple headers:
let bindings = bindgen::Builder::default() .header("first.h") .header("second.h") .header("third.h") .generate() .unwrap();
pub fn header_contents(self, name: &str, contents: &str) -> Builder
[src]
Add contents
as an input C/C++ header named name
.
The file name
will be added to the clang arguments.
pub fn rust_target(self, rust_target: RustTarget) -> Self
[src]
Specify the rust target
The default is the latest stable Rust version
pub fn disable_untagged_union(self) -> Self
[src]
Disable support for native Rust unions, if supported.
pub fn disable_header_comment(self) -> Self
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Disable insertion of bindgen’s version identifier into generated bindings.
pub fn emit_ir_graphviz<T: Into<String>>(self, path: T) -> Builder
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Set the output graphviz file.
pub fn generate_comments(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Whether the generated bindings should contain documentation comments (docstrings) or not. This is set to true by default.
Note that clang by default excludes comments from system headers, pass
-fretain-comments-from-system-headers
as
clang_arg
to include them. It can also be told
to process all comments (not just documentation ones) using the
-fparse-all-comments
flag. See slides on clang comment parsing for
background and examples.
pub fn allowlist_recursively(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Whether to allowlist recursively or not. Defaults to true.
Given that we have explicitly allowlisted the “initiate_dance_party” function in this C header:
typedef struct MoonBoots {
int bouncy_level;
} MoonBoots;
void initiate_dance_party(MoonBoots* boots);
We would normally generate bindings to both the initiate_dance_party
function and the MoonBoots
struct that it transitively references. By
configuring with allowlist_recursively(false)
, bindgen
will not emit
bindings for anything except the explicitly allowlisted items, and there
would be no emitted struct definition for MoonBoots
. However, the
initiate_dance_party
function would still reference MoonBoots
!
Disabling this feature will almost certainly cause bindgen
to emit
bindings that will not compile! If you disable this feature, then it
is your responsibility to provide definitions for every type that is
referenced from an explicitly allowlisted item. One way to provide the
definitions is by using the Builder::raw_line
method, another would be to define them in Rust and then include!(...)
the bindings immediately afterwards.
pub fn whitelist_recursively(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Use allowlist_recursively instead
Deprecated alias for allowlist_recursively.
pub fn objc_extern_crate(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Generate #[macro_use] extern crate objc;
instead of use objc;
in the prologue of the files generated from objective-c files
pub fn generate_block(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Generate proper block signatures instead of void pointers.
pub fn block_extern_crate(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Generate #[macro_use] extern crate block;
instead of use block;
in the prologue of the files generated from apple block files
pub fn trust_clang_mangling(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Whether to use the clang-provided name mangling. This is true by default and probably needed for C++ features.
However, some old libclang versions seem to return incorrect results in some cases for non-mangled functions, see 1, so we allow disabling it.
pub fn hide_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Use blocklist_type instead
Hide the given type from the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn blacklist_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Use blocklist_type instead
Hide the given type from the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn blocklist_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Hide the given type from the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
To blocklist types prefixed with “mylib” use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn blacklist_function<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Use blocklist_function instead
Hide the given function from the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn blocklist_function<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Hide the given function from the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
To blocklist functions prefixed with “mylib” use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn blacklist_item<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Use blocklist_item instead
Hide the given item from the generated bindings, regardless of whether it’s a type, function, module, etc. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn blocklist_item<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Hide the given item from the generated bindings, regardless of whether it’s a type, function, module, etc. Regular expressions are supported.
To blocklist items prefixed with “mylib” use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn opaque_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
[src]
Treat the given type as opaque in the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
To change types prefixed with “mylib” into opaque, use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn whitelisted_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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use allowlist_type instead
Allowlist the given type so that it (and all types that it transitively refers to) appears in the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn whitelist_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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use allowlist_type instead
Allowlist the given type so that it (and all types that it transitively refers to) appears in the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn allowlist_type<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Allowlist the given type so that it (and all types that it transitively refers to) appears in the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
To allowlist types prefixed with “mylib” use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn allowlist_function<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
[src]
Allowlist the given function so that it (and all types that it transitively refers to) appears in the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
To allowlist functions prefixed with “mylib” use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn whitelist_function<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
[src]
use allowlist_function instead
Allowlist the given function.
Deprecated: use allowlist_function instead.
pub fn whitelisted_function<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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use allowlist_function instead
Allowlist the given function.
Deprecated: use allowlist_function instead.
pub fn allowlist_var<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Allowlist the given variable so that it (and all types that it transitively refers to) appears in the generated bindings. Regular expressions are supported.
To allowlist variables prefixed with “mylib” use "mylib_.*"
.
For more complicated expressions check
regex docs
pub fn whitelist_var<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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use allowlist_var instead
Deprecated: use allowlist_var instead.
pub fn whitelisted_var<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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use allowlist_var instead
Allowlist the given variable.
Deprecated: use allowlist_var instead.
pub fn default_enum_style(self, arg: EnumVariation) -> Builder
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Set the default style of code to generate for enums
pub fn bitfield_enum<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given enum (or set of enums, if using a pattern) as being bitfield-like. Regular expressions are supported.
This makes bindgen generate a type that isn’t a rust enum
. Regular
expressions are supported.
This is similar to the newtype enum style, but with the bitwise operators implemented.
pub fn newtype_enum<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given enum (or set of enums, if using a pattern) as a newtype. Regular expressions are supported.
This makes bindgen generate a type that isn’t a Rust enum
. Regular
expressions are supported.
pub fn rustified_enum<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given enum (or set of enums, if using a pattern) as a Rust enum.
This makes bindgen generate enums instead of constants. Regular expressions are supported.
Use this with caution, creating this in unsafe code (including FFI) with an invalid value will invoke undefined behaviour. You may want to use the newtype enum style instead.
pub fn rustified_non_exhaustive_enum<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
[src]
Mark the given enum (or set of enums, if using a pattern) as a Rust
enum with the #[non_exhaustive]
attribute.
This makes bindgen generate enums instead of constants. Regular expressions are supported.
Use this with caution, creating this in unsafe code (including FFI) with an invalid value will invoke undefined behaviour. You may want to use the newtype enum style instead.
pub fn constified_enum<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given enum (or set of enums, if using a pattern) as a set of constants that are not to be put into a module.
pub fn constified_enum_module<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given enum (or set of enums, if using a pattern) as a set of constants that should be put into a module.
This makes bindgen generate modules containing constants instead of just constants. Regular expressions are supported.
pub fn default_macro_constant_type(self, arg: MacroTypeVariation) -> Builder
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Set the default type for macro constants
pub fn default_alias_style(self, arg: AliasVariation) -> Builder
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Set the default style of code to generate for typedefs
pub fn type_alias<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given typedef alias (or set of aliases, if using a pattern) to use regular Rust type aliasing.
This is the default behavior and should be used if default_alias_style
was set to NewType or NewTypeDeref and you want to override it for a
set of typedefs.
pub fn new_type_alias<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given typedef alias (or set of aliases, if using a pattern) to be generated as a new type by having the aliased type be wrapped in a #[repr(transparent)] struct.
Used to enforce stricter type checking.
pub fn new_type_alias_deref<T: AsRef<str>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Mark the given typedef alias (or set of aliases, if using a pattern) to
be generated as a new type by having the aliased type be wrapped in a
#[repr(transparent)] struct and also have an automatically generated
impl’s of Deref
and DerefMut
to their aliased type.
pub fn raw_line<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Self
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Add a string to prepend to the generated bindings. The string is passed through without any modification.
pub fn module_raw_line<T, U>(self, mod_: T, line: U) -> Self where
T: Into<String>,
U: Into<String>,
[src]
T: Into<String>,
U: Into<String>,
Add a given line to the beginning of module mod
.
pub fn module_raw_lines<T, I>(self, mod_: T, lines: I) -> Self where
T: Into<String>,
I: IntoIterator,
I::Item: Into<String>,
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T: Into<String>,
I: IntoIterator,
I::Item: Into<String>,
Add a given set of lines to the beginning of module mod
.
pub fn clang_arg<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
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Add an argument to be passed straight through to clang.
pub fn clang_args<I>(self, iter: I) -> Builder where
I: IntoIterator,
I::Item: AsRef<str>,
[src]
I: IntoIterator,
I::Item: AsRef<str>,
Add arguments to be passed straight through to clang.
pub fn emit_builtins(self) -> Builder
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Emit bindings for builtin definitions (for example __builtin_va_list
)
in the generated Rust.
pub fn no_convert_floats(self) -> Self
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Avoid converting floats to f32
/f64
by default.
pub fn layout_tests(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether layout tests should be generated.
pub fn impl_debug(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether Debug
should be implemented, if it can not be derived automatically.
pub fn impl_partialeq(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether PartialEq
should be implemented, if it can not be derived automatically.
pub fn derive_copy(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether Copy
should be derived by default.
pub fn derive_debug(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether Debug
should be derived by default.
pub fn derive_default(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether Default
should be derived by default.
pub fn derive_hash(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether Hash
should be derived by default.
pub fn derive_partialord(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether PartialOrd
should be derived by default.
If we don’t compute partialord, we also cannot compute
ord. Set the derive_ord to false
when doit is false
.
pub fn derive_ord(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Set whether Ord
should be derived by default.
We can’t compute Ord
without computing PartialOrd
,
so we set the same option to derive_partialord.
pub fn derive_partialeq(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Set whether PartialEq
should be derived by default.
If we don’t derive PartialEq
, we also cannot derive Eq
, so deriving
Eq
is also disabled when doit
is false
.
pub fn derive_eq(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Set whether Eq
should be derived by default.
We can’t derive Eq
without also deriving PartialEq
, so we also
enable deriving PartialEq
when doit
is true
.
pub fn time_phases(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether or not to time bindgen phases, and print information to stderr.
pub fn emit_clang_ast(self) -> Builder
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Emit Clang AST.
pub fn emit_ir(self) -> Builder
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Emit IR.
pub fn enable_cxx_namespaces(self) -> Builder
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Enable C++ namespaces.
pub fn enable_function_attribute_detection(self) -> Self
[src]
Enable detecting must_use attributes on C functions.
This is quite slow in some cases (see #1465), so it’s disabled by default.
Note that for this to do something meaningful for now at least, the rust
target version has to have support for #[must_use]
.
pub fn disable_name_namespacing(self) -> Builder
[src]
Disable name auto-namespacing.
By default, bindgen mangles names like foo::bar::Baz
to look like
foo_bar_Baz
instead of just Baz
.
This method disables that behavior.
Note that this intentionally does not change the names used for allowlisting and blocklisting, which should still be mangled with the namespaces.
Note, also, that this option may cause bindgen to generate duplicate names.
pub fn disable_nested_struct_naming(self) -> Builder
[src]
Disable nested struct naming.
The following structs have different names for C and C++. In case of C
they are visible as foo
and bar
. In case of C++ they are visible as
foo
and foo::bar
.
struct foo {
struct bar {
} b;
};
Bindgen wants to avoid duplicate names by default so it follows C++ naming
and it generates foo
/foo_bar
instead of just foo
/bar
.
This method disables this behavior and it is indented to be used only for headers that were written for C.
pub fn conservative_inline_namespaces(self) -> Builder
[src]
Treat inline namespaces conservatively.
This is tricky, because in C++ is technically legal to override an item defined in an inline namespace:
inline namespace foo {
using Bar = int;
}
using Bar = long;
Even though referencing Bar
is a compiler error.
We want to support this (arguably esoteric) use case, but we don’t want to make the rest of bindgen users pay an usability penalty for that.
To support this, we need to keep all the inline namespaces around, but
then bindgen usage is a bit more difficult, because you cannot
reference, e.g., std::string
(you’d need to use the proper inline
namespace).
We could complicate a lot of the logic to detect name collisions, and if
not detected generate a pub use inline_ns::*
or something like that.
That’s probably something we can do if we see this option is needed in a lot of cases, to improve it’s usability, but my guess is that this is not going to be too useful.
pub fn generate_inline_functions(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Whether inline functions should be generated or not.
Note that they will usually not work. However you can use
-fkeep-inline-functions
or -fno-inline-functions
if you are
responsible of compiling the library to make them callable.
pub fn ignore_functions(self) -> Builder
[src]
Ignore functions.
pub fn ignore_methods(self) -> Builder
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Ignore methods.
pub fn unstable_rust(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
please use rust_target
instead
Avoid generating any unstable Rust, such as Rust unions, in the generated bindings.
pub fn use_core(self) -> Builder
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Use core instead of libstd in the generated bindings.
pub fn ctypes_prefix<T: Into<String>>(self, prefix: T) -> Builder
[src]
Use the given prefix for the raw types instead of ::std::os::raw
.
pub fn anon_fields_prefix<T: Into<String>>(self, prefix: T) -> Builder
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Use the given prefix for the anon fields.
pub fn parse_callbacks(self, cb: Box<dyn ParseCallbacks>) -> Self
[src]
Allows configuring types in different situations, see the
ParseCallbacks
documentation.
pub fn with_codegen_config(self, config: CodegenConfig) -> Self
[src]
Choose what to generate using a
CodegenConfig
.
pub fn detect_include_paths(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Whether to detect include paths using clang_sys.
pub fn fit_macro_constants(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Whether to try to fit macro constants to types smaller than u32/i32
pub fn prepend_enum_name(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Prepend the enum name to constant or newtype variants.
pub fn size_t_is_usize(self, is: bool) -> Self
[src]
Set whether size_t
should be translated to usize
automatically.
pub fn rustfmt_bindings(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Set whether rustfmt should format the generated bindings.
pub fn record_matches(self, doit: bool) -> Self
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Set whether we should record matched items in our regex sets.
pub fn rustfmt_configuration_file(self, path: Option<PathBuf>) -> Self
[src]
Set the absolute path to the rustfmt configuration file, if None, the standard rustfmt options are used.
pub fn with_rustfmt<P: Into<PathBuf>>(self, path: P) -> Self
[src]
Sets an explicit path to rustfmt, to be used when rustfmt is enabled.
pub fn generate(self) -> Result<Bindings, ()>
[src]
Generate the Rust bindings using the options built up thus far.
pub fn dump_preprocessed_input(&self) -> Result<()>
[src]
Preprocess and dump the input header files to disk.
This is useful when debugging bindgen, using C-Reduce, or when filing
issues. The resulting file will be named something like __bindgen.i
or
__bindgen.ii
pub fn no_partialeq<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
[src]
Don’t derive PartialEq
for a given type. Regular
expressions are supported.
pub fn no_copy<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Self
[src]
Don’t derive Copy
for a given type. Regular
expressions are supported.
pub fn no_debug<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Self
[src]
Don’t derive Debug
for a given type. Regular
expressions are supported.
pub fn no_default<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Self
[src]
Don’t derive/impl Default
for a given type. Regular
expressions are supported.
pub fn no_hash<T: Into<String>>(self, arg: T) -> Builder
[src]
Don’t derive Hash
for a given type. Regular
expressions are supported.
pub fn array_pointers_in_arguments(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Set whether arr[size]
should be treated as *mut T
or *mut [T; size]
(same for mut)
pub fn wasm_import_module_name<T: Into<String>>(self, import_name: T) -> Self
[src]
Set the wasm import module name
pub fn dynamic_library_name<T: Into<String>>(
self,
dynamic_library_name: T
) -> Self
[src]
self,
dynamic_library_name: T
) -> Self
Specify the dynamic library name if we are generating bindings for a shared library.
pub fn dynamic_link_require_all(self, req: bool) -> Self
[src]
Require successful linkage for all routines in a shared library. This allows us to optimize function calls by being able to safely assume function pointers are valid.
pub fn respect_cxx_access_specs(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Generate bindings as pub
only if the bound item is publically accessible by C++.
pub fn translate_enum_integer_types(self, doit: bool) -> Self
[src]
Always translate enum integer types to native Rust integer types.
This will result in enums having types such as u32
and i16
instead
of c_uint
and c_short
. Types for Rustified enums are always
translated.
Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl !RefUnwindSafe for Builder
impl !Send for Builder
impl !Sync for Builder
impl Unpin for Builder
impl UnwindSafe for Builder
Blanket Implementations
impl<T> Any for T where
T: 'static + ?Sized,
[src]
T: 'static + ?Sized,
impl<T> Borrow<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
[src]
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
[src]
T: ?Sized,
pub fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
[src]
impl<T> From<T> for T
[src]
impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where
U: From<T>,
[src]
U: From<T>,
impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T where
U: Into<T>,
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U: Into<T>,
type Error = Infallible
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
pub fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
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impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T where
U: TryFrom<T>,
[src]
U: TryFrom<T>,