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Question: Why is my C++ swigged object losing its type when passed to a Java callback function?

EDIT 1: I'm not 100% sure, but I'm starting to think this is the down-casting problem that is described here. Basically they have a function returning different types - Parent / Child etc - out of a factory method and you get the same problem I see here where everything out of the factory is of the base type and cannot be cast to the child class...

Setup: I've taken the Swig Java example for doing callbacks and added an object to be passed to the callback run(Parent p). The callback works as expected but when I pass a Child object the Java seems to lose its type and think its of type Parent when it should be Child. This is based on the Swig java callback example.

System Info: Ubuntu 8.04 w/ Swig 1.3.33 - on the off chance the latest Swig made a difference I also tested 1.3.39 - which had no effect.

Outputs:

bash$ java -Djava.library.path=. runme
Adding and calling a normal C++ callback
----------------------------------------
Callback::run(5Child)
Callback::~Callback()

Adding and calling a Java callback
------------------------------------
JavaCallback.run(Parent)
Callback::run(5Child)
Callback::~Callback()

As you can see in the outputs - the object is really of type Child - but its Java class name is Parent - which is wrong...

If you look in the Java callback run(Parent p) you can see where I'm fetching the Java class, and Java really does think this object is of type Parent - trying to cast this to Child will throw ClassCastException as expected.

Code:

/* File : example.i */
%module(directors="1") example
%{
#include "example.h"
%}

%include "std_string.i"

/* turn on director wrapping Callback */
%feature("director") Callback;

%include "example.h"




/* File : example.h */
#include <string>
#include <cstdio>
#include <iostream>
#include <typeinfo>

class Parent {
public:
    virtual const char* getName() {
        return typeid(*this).name();
    }
};


class Child : virtual public Parent {
};



class Callback {
public:
    virtual ~Callback() { std::cout << "Callback::~Callback()" << std:: endl; }
    virtual void run(Parent& p) { std::cout << "Callback::run(" << p.getName() << ")" << std::endl; }
};


class Caller {
private:
    Callback *_callback;
public:
    Caller(): _callback(0) {}
    ~Caller() { delCallback(); }
    void delCallback() { delete _callback; _callback = 0; }
    void setCallback(Callback *cb) { delCallback(); _callback = cb; }
    void call() {
        Parent *p = new Child();
        if (_callback) 
            _callback->run(*p);
        delete p;
    }
};



/* File: runme.java */
public class runme
{
  static {
    try {
        System.loadLibrary("example");
    } catch (UnsatisfiedLinkError e) {
      System.err.println("Native code library failed to load. See the chapter on Dynamic Linking Problems in the SWIG Java documentation for help.\n" + e);
      System.exit(1);
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args)
  {
    System.out.println("Adding and calling a normal C++ callback");
    System.out.println("----------------------------------------");

    Caller              caller = new Caller();
    Callback            callback = new Callback();

    caller.setCallback(callback);
    caller.call();
    caller.delCallback();

    callback = new JavaCallback();

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println("Adding and calling a Java callback");
    System.out.println("------------------------------------");

    caller.setCallback(callback);
    caller.call();
    caller.delCallback();

    // Test that a double delete does not occur as the object has already been deleted from the C++ layer.
    // Note that the garbage collector can also call the delete() method via the finalizer (callback.finalize())
    // at any point after here.
    callback.delete();

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println("java exit");
  }
}

class JavaCallback extends Callback
{
  public JavaCallback()
  {
    super();
  }

  public void run(Parent p)
  {
    System.out.println("JavaCallback.run("+p.getClass().getSimpleName()+")");
    super.run(p);
  }
}




# File: Makefile
TOP        = ../..
SWIG       = $(TOP)/../preinst-swig
CXXSRCS    = example.cxx
TARGET     = example
INTERFACE  = example.i
SWIGOPT    =

all::   java

java::
    $(MAKE) -f $(TOP)/Makefile CXXSRCS='$(CXXSRCS)' SWIG='$(SWIG)' \
    SWIGOPT='$(SWIGOPT)' TARGET='$(TARGET)' INTERFACE='$(INTERFACE)' java_cpp
    javac *.java

clean::
    $(MAKE) -f $(TOP)/Makefile java_clean

check: all

This might be a bug in Swig - but I'm hoping that this is my being stupid with C++ types/casting...

Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated!

show/hide this revision's text 8 added 423 characters in body

Question: Why is my C++ swigged object losing its type when passed to a Java callback function?

EDIT 1: I'm not 100% sure, but I'm starting to think this is the down-casting problem that is described here. Basically they have a function returning different types - Parent / Child etc - out of a factory method and you get the same problem I see here where everything out of the factory is of the base type and cannot be cast to the child class...

Setup: I've taken the Swig Java example for doing callbacks and added an object to be passed to the callback run(Parent p). The callback works as expected but when I pass a Child object the Java seems to lose its type and think its of type Parent when it should be Child. This is based on the Swig java callback example.

System Info: Ubuntu 8.04 w/ Swig 1.3.33 - on the off chance the latest Swig made a difference I also tested 1.3.39 - which had no effect.

Outputs:

bash$ java -Djava.library.path=. runme
Adding and calling a normal C++ callback
----------------------------------------
Callback::run(5Child)
Callback::~Callback()

Adding and calling a Java callback
------------------------------------
JavaCallback.run(Parent)
Callback::run(5Child)
Callback::~Callback()

As you can see in the outputs - the object is really of type Child - but its Java class name is Parent - which is wrong...

If you look in the Java callback run(Parent p) you can see where I'm fetching the Java class, and Java really does think this object is of type Parent - trying to cast this to Child will throw ClassCastException as expected.

Code:

/* File : example.i */
%module(directors="1") example
%{
#include "example.h"
%}

%include "std_string.i"

/* turn on director wrapping Callback */
%feature("director") Callback;

%include "example.h"




/* File : example.h */
#include <string>
#include <cstdio>
#include <iostream>
#include <typeinfo>

class Parent {
public:
    virtual const char* getName() {
        return typeid(*this).name();
    }
};


class Child : virtual public Parent {
};



class Callback {
public:
    virtual ~Callback() { std::cout << "Callback::~Callback()" << std:: endl; }
    virtual void run(Parent& p) { std::cout << "Callback::run(" << p.getName() << ")" << std::endl; }
};


class Caller {
private:
    Callback *_callback;
public:
    Caller(): _callback(0) {}
    ~Caller() { delCallback(); }
    void delCallback() { delete _callback; _callback = 0; }
    void setCallback(Callback *cb) { delCallback(); _callback = cb; }
    void call() {
        Parent *p = new Child();
        if (_callback) 
            _callback->run(*p);
        delete p;
    }
};



/* File: runme.java */
public class runme
{
  static {
    try {
        System.loadLibrary("example");
    } catch (UnsatisfiedLinkError e) {
      System.err.println("Native code library failed to load. See the chapter on Dynamic Linking Problems in the SWIG Java documentation for help.\n" + e);
      System.exit(1);
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args)
  {
    System.out.println("Adding and calling a normal C++ callback");
    System.out.println("----------------------------------------");

    Caller              caller = new Caller();
    Callback            callback = new Callback();

    caller.setCallback(callback);
    caller.call();
    caller.delCallback();

    callback = new JavaCallback();

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println("Adding and calling a Java callback");
    System.out.println("------------------------------------");

    caller.setCallback(callback);
    caller.call();
    caller.delCallback();

    // Test that a double delete does not occur as the object has already been deleted from the C++ layer.
    // Note that the garbage collector can also call the delete() method via the finalizer (callback.finalize())
    // at any point after here.
    callback.delete();

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println("java exit");
  }
}

class JavaCallback extends Callback
{
  public JavaCallback()
  {
    super();
  }

  public void run(Parent p)
  {
    System.out.println("JavaCallback.run("+p.getClass().getSimpleName()+")");
    super.run(p);
  }
}




# File: Makefile
TOP        = ../..
SWIG       = $(TOP)/../preinst-swig
CXXSRCS    = example.cxx
TARGET     = example
INTERFACE  = example.i
SWIGOPT    =

all::   java

java::
    $(MAKE) -f $(TOP)/Makefile CXXSRCS='$(CXXSRCS)' SWIG='$(SWIG)' \
    SWIGOPT='$(SWIGOPT)' TARGET='$(TARGET)' INTERFACE='$(INTERFACE)' java_cpp
    javac *.java

clean::
    $(MAKE) -f $(TOP)/Makefile java_clean

check: all

This might be a bug in Swig - but I'm hoping that this is my being stupid with C++ types/casting...

Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated!

show/hide this revision's text 7 More details...

Question: Why is my C++ swigged object losing its type when passed to a Java callback function?

Setup: I've taken the Swig Java example for doing callbacks and added an object to be passed to the callback run(Parent p). The callback works as expected but when I pass a Child object the Java seems to lose its type and think its of type Parent when it should be Child. This is based on the Swig java callback example.

System Info: Ubuntu 8.04 w/ Swig 1.3.33 - on the off chance the latest Swig made a difference I also tested 1.3.39 - which had no effect.

Outputs:

bash$ java -Djava.library.path=. runme
Adding and calling a normal C++ callback
----------------------------------------
Callback::run(5Child)
Callback::~Callback()

Adding and calling a Java callback
------------------------------------
JavaCallback.run(Parent)
Callback::run(5Child)
Callback::~Callback()

As you can see in the outputs - the object is really of type Child - but its Java class name is Parent - which is wrong...

If you look in the Java callback run(Parent p) you can see where I'm fetching the Java class, and Java really does think this object is of type Parent - trying to cast this to Child will throw ClassCastException as expected.

Code:

/* File : example.i */
%module(directors="1") example
%{
#include "example.h"
%}

%include "std_string.i"

/* turn on director wrapping Callback */
%feature("director") Callback;

%include "example.h"




/* File : example.h */
#include <string>
#include <cstdio>
#include <iostream>
#include <typeinfo>

class Parent {
public:
    virtual const char* getName() {
        return typeid(*this).name();
    }
};


class Child : virtual public Parent {
};



class Callback {
public:
    virtual ~Callback() { std::cout << "Callback::~Callback()" << std:: endl; }
    virtual void run(Parent& p) { std::cout << "Callback::run(" << p.getName() << ")" << std::endl; }
};


class Caller {
private:
    Callback *_callback;
public:
    Caller(): _callback(0) {}
    ~Caller() { delCallback(); }
    void delCallback() { delete _callback; _callback = 0; }
    void setCallback(Callback *cb) { delCallback(); _callback = cb; }
    void call() {
        Parent *p = new Child();
        if (_callback) 
            _callback->run(*p);
        delete p;
    }
};



/* File: runme.java */
public class runme
{
  static {
    try {
        System.loadLibrary("example");
    } catch (UnsatisfiedLinkError e) {
      System.err.println("Native code library failed to load. See the chapter on Dynamic Linking Problems in the SWIG Java documentation for help.\n" + e);
      System.exit(1);
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args)
  {
    System.out.println("Adding and calling a normal C++ callback");
    System.out.println("----------------------------------------");

    Caller              caller = new Caller();
    Callback            callback = new Callback();

    caller.setCallback(callback);
    caller.call();
    caller.delCallback();

    callback = new JavaCallback();

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println("Adding and calling a Java callback");
    System.out.println("------------------------------------");

    caller.setCallback(callback);
    caller.call();
    caller.delCallback();

    // Test that a double delete does not occur as the object has already been deleted from the C++ layer.
    // Note that the garbage collector can also call the delete() method via the finalizer (callback.finalize())
    // at any point after here.
    callback.delete();

    System.out.println();
    System.out.println("java exit");
  }
}

class JavaCallback extends Callback
{
  public JavaCallback()
  {
    super();
  }

  public void run(Parent p)
  {
    System.out.println("JavaCallback.run("+p.getClass().getSimpleName()+")");
    super.run(p);
  }
}




# File: Makefile
TOP        = ../..
SWIG       = $(TOP)/../preinst-swig
CXXSRCS    = example.cxx
TARGET     = example
INTERFACE  = example.i
SWIGOPT    =

all::   java

java::
    $(MAKE) -f $(TOP)/Makefile CXXSRCS='$(CXXSRCS)' SWIG='$(SWIG)' \
    SWIGOPT='$(SWIGOPT)' TARGET='$(TARGET)' INTERFACE='$(INTERFACE)' java_cpp
    javac *.java

clean::
    $(MAKE) -f $(TOP)/Makefile java_clean

check: all

This might be a bug in Swig - but I'm hoping that this is my being stupid with C++ types/casting...

Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated!

show/hide this revision's text 6 adding system info
show/hide this revision's text 5 changed loose to lose
show/hide this revision's text 4 added link to question base
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