Disclaimer: I generally discourage what I'm about to say. Having code running before or after main
makes things less predictable. I'm not sure why you wouldn't just let the first line of main
invoke your myinit
, but I suppose everyone has a reason. Here goes.
I don't know much about Mach-O, but the simplest way to run code before main, is to link in a C++ class that has a corresponding global instance defined. You can do this independently of your "C" code without having to alter anything else. You can also have this C++ code invoke C functions defined elsewhere in your code. In the example below, I show a simple example of how I would invoke your myinit
.
In a standalone .cpp (or .cc) file, declare a very simple C++ class with a constructor that calls your "myinit function".
foo.cpp
// forward declare your myinit function and designate "C" linkage
extern "C" myinit(int, char**, char**);
class CodeToRunBeforeMain
{
public:
CodeToRunBeforeMain()
{
// invoke your myinit function here
myinit(0, NULL, NULL);
}
};
// global instance - constructor will run before main.
CodeToRunBeforeMain g_runBeforeMain;
The above approach doesn't recognize argc, argv, or envp. Hopefully, that isn't important.