Rust GLib and GObject bindings
Rust bindings and wrappers for GLib, part of gtk-rs-core.
GLib 2.56 is the lowest supported version for the underlying library.
This library contains bindings to GLib and GObject types and APIs as well as common building blocks used in both handmade and machine generated bindings to GTK and other GLib-based libraries.
It is the foundation for higher level libraries with uniform Rusty (safe and strongly typed) APIs. It avoids exposing GLib-specific data types where possible and is not meant to provide comprehensive GLib bindings, which would often amount to duplicating the Rust Standard Library or other utility crates.
Minimum supported Rust version
Currently, the minimum supported Rust version is 1.70.0
.
Dynamic typing
Most types in the GLib family have Type
identifiers.
Their corresponding Rust types implement the StaticType
trait.
A dynamically typed Value
can carry values of any StaticType
.
Variants can carry values of StaticVariantType
.
Errors
Errors are represented by Error
, which can
carry values from various error domains such as
FileError
.
Objects
Each class and interface has a corresponding smart pointer struct
representing an instance of that type (e.g. Object
for GObject
or
gtk4::Widget
for GtkWidget
). They are reference counted and feature
interior mutability similarly to Rust's
Rc<RefCell<T>>
idiom. Consequently, cloning objects is cheap and their methods never require
mutable borrows. Two smart pointers are equal if they point to the same
object.
The root of the object hierarchy is Object
.
Inheritance and subtyping is denoted with the IsA
marker trait. The Cast
trait enables upcasting
and downcasting.
Interfaces and non-leaf classes also have corresponding traits (e.g.
ObjectExt
or WidgetExt
), which are blanketly implemented for all
their subtypes.
You can create new subclasses of Object
or other object types. Look at
the module's documentation for further details and a code example.
Under the hood
GLib-based libraries largely operate on pointers to various boxed or
reference counted structures so the bindings have to implement corresponding
smart pointers (wrappers), which encapsulate resource management and safety
checks. Such wrappers are defined via the
wrapper!
macro, which uses abstractions
defined in the wrapper
, boxed
,
shared
and object
modules.
The translate
module defines and partly implements
conversions between high level Rust types (including the aforementioned
wrappers) and their FFI counterparts.
Documentation
Using
We recommend using crates from crates.io, as demonstrated here.
If you want to track the bleeding edge, use the git dependency instead:
[]
= { = "https://github.com/gtk-rs/gtk-rs-core.git", = "glib" }
Avoid mixing versioned and git crates like this:
# This will not compile
[]
= "0.13"
= { = "https://github.com/gtk-rs/gtk-rs-core.git", = "glib" }
License
glib is available under the MIT License, please refer to it.