Decompile a g++
generated binary to see what is going on
To understand why extern
is necessary, the best thing to do is to understand what is going on in detail in the object files with an example:
main.cpp
void f() {}
void g();
extern "C" {
void ef() {}
void eg();
}
/* Prevent g and eg from being optimized away. */
void h() { g(); eg(); }
Compile with GCC 4.8 Linux ELF output:
g++ -c main.cpp
Decompile the symbol table:
readelf -s main.o
The output contains:
Num: Value Size Type Bind Vis Ndx Name
8: 0000000000000000 6 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 _Z1fv
9: 0000000000000006 6 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 ef
10: 000000000000000c 16 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 _Z1hv
11: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE GLOBAL DEFAULT UND _Z1gv
12: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE GLOBAL DEFAULT UND eg
Interpretation
We see that:
ef
and eg
were stored in symbols with the same name as in the code
the other symbols were mangled. Let's unmangle them:
$ c++filt _Z1fv
f()
$ c++filt _Z1hv
h()
$ c++filt _Z1gv
g()
Conclusion: both of the following symbol types were not mangled:
- defined
- declared but undefined (
Ndx = UND
), to be provided at link or run time from another object file
So you will need extern "C"
both when calling:
- C from C++: tell
g++
to expect unmangled symbols produced by gcc
- C++ from C: tell
g++
to generate unmangled symbols for gcc
to use
Things that do not work in extern C
It becomes obvious that any C++ feature that requires name mangling will not work inside extern C
:
extern "C" {
// Overloading.
// error: declaration of C function ‘void f(int)’ conflicts with
void f();
void f(int i);
// Templates.
// error: template with C linkage
template <class C> void f(C i) { }
}
Minimal runnable C from C++ example
For the sake of completeness and for the newbs out there, see also: How to use C source files in a C++ project?
Calling C from C++ is pretty easy: each C function only has one possible non-mangled symbol, so no extra work is required.
main.cpp
#include <cassert>
#include "c.h"
int main() {
assert(f() == 1);
}
c.h
#ifndef C_H
#define C_H
/* This ifdef allows the header to be used from both C and C++. */
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
int f();
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif
c.c
#include "c.h"
int f(void) { return 1; }
Run:
g++ -c -o main.o -std=c++98 main.cpp
gcc -c -o c.o -std=c89 c.c
g++ -o main.out main.o c.o
./main.out
Without extern "C"
the link fails with:
main.cpp:6: undefined reference to `f()'
because g++
expects to find a mangled f
, which gcc
did not produce.
Example on GitHub.
Minimal runnable C++ from C example
Calling C++ from is a bit harder: we have to manually create non-mangled versions of each function we want to expose.
Here we illustrate how to expose C++ function overloads to C.
main.c
#include <assert.h>
#include "cpp.h"
int main(void) {
assert(f_int(1) == 2);
assert(f_float(1.0) == 3);
return 0;
}
cpp.h
#ifndef CPP_H
#define CPP_H
#ifdef __cplusplus
// C cannot see these overloaded prototypes, or else it would get confused.
int f(int i);
int f(float i);
extern "C" {
#endif
int f_int(int i);
int f_float(float i);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif
cpp.cpp
#include "cpp.h"
int f(int i) {
return i + 1;
}
int f(float i) {
return i + 2;
}
int f_int(int i) {
return f(i);
}
int f_float(float i) {
return f(i);
}
Run:
gcc -c -o main.o -std=c89 -Wextra main.c
g++ -c -o cpp.o -std=c++98 cpp.cpp
g++ -o main.out main.o cpp.o
./main.out
Without extern "C"
it fails with:
main.c:6: undefined reference to `f_int'
main.c:7: undefined reference to `f_float'
because g++
generated mangled symbols which gcc
cannot find.
Example on GitHub.
Tested in Ubuntu 18.04.