plucky (3) FFI::CheckLib.3pm.gz

Provided by: libffi-checklib-perl_0.31-1_all bug

NAME

       FFI::CheckLib - Check that a library is available for FFI

VERSION

       version 0.31

SYNOPSIS

        use FFI::CheckLib;

        check_lib_or_exit( lib => 'jpeg', symbol => 'jinit_memory_mgr' );
        check_lib_or_exit( lib => [ 'iconv', 'jpeg' ] );

        # or prompt for path to library and then:
        print "where to find jpeg library: ";
        my $path = <STDIN>;
        check_lib_or_exit( lib => 'jpeg', libpath => $path );

DESCRIPTION

       This module checks whether a particular dynamic library is available for FFI to use. It is modeled
       heavily on Devel::CheckLib, but will find dynamic libraries even when development packages are not
       installed.  It also provides a find_lib function that will return the full path to the found dynamic
       library, which can be feed directly into FFI::Platypus or another FFI system.

       Although intended mainly for FFI modules via FFI::Platypus and similar, this module does not actually use
       any FFI to do its detection and probing.  This module does not have any non-core runtime dependencies.
       The test suite does depend on Test2::Suite.

FUNCTIONS

       All of these take the same named parameters and are exported by default.

   find_lib
        my(@libs) = find_lib(%args);

       This will return a list of dynamic libraries, or empty list if none were found.

       [version 0.05]

       If called in scalar context it will return the first library found.

       Arguments are key value pairs with these keys:

       lib Must be either a string with the name of a single library or a reference to an array of strings of
           library names.  Depending on your platform, "CheckLib" will prepend "lib" or append ".dll" or ".so"
           when searching.

           [version 0.11]

           As a special case, if "*" is specified then any libs found will match.

       libpath
           A string or array of additional paths to search for libraries.

       systempath
           [version 0.11]

           A string or array of system paths to search for instead of letting FFI::CheckLib determine the system
           path.  You can set this to "[]" in order to not search any system paths.

       symbol
           A string or a list of symbol names that must be found.

       verify
           A code reference used to verify a library really is the one that you want.  It should take two
           arguments, which is the name of the library and the full path to the library pathname.  It should
           return true if it is acceptable, and false otherwise.  You can use this in conjunction with
           FFI::Platypus to determine if it is going to meet your needs.  Example:

            use FFI::CheckLib;
            use FFI::Platypus;

            my($lib) = find_lib(
              lib => 'foo',
              verify => sub {
                my($name, $libpath) = @_;

                my $ffi = FFI::Platypus->new;
                $ffi->lib($libpath);

                my $f = $ffi->function('foo_version', [] => 'int');

                return $f->call() >= 500; # we accept version 500 or better
              },
            );

       recursive
           [version 0.11]

           Recursively search for libraries in any non-system paths (those provided via "libpath" above).

       try_linker_script
           [version 0.24]

           Some vendors provide ".so" files that are linker scripts that point to the real binary shared
           library.  These linker scripts can be used by gcc or clang, but are not directly usable by
           FFI::Platypus and friends.  On select platforms, this options will use the linker command ("ld") to
           attempt to resolve the real ".so" for non-binary files.  Since there is extra overhead this is off by
           default.

           An example is libyaml on Red Hat based Linux distributions.  On Debian these are handled with
           symlinks and no trickery is required.

       alien
           [version 0.25]

           If no libraries can be found, try the given aliens instead.  The Alien classes specified must provide
           the Alien::Base interface for dynamic libraries, which is to say they should provide a method called
           "dynamic_libs" that returns a list of dynamic libraries.

           [version 0.28]

           In 0.28 and later, if the Alien is not installed then it will be ignored and this module will search
           in system or specified directories only.  This module will still throw an exception, if the Alien
           doesn't look like a module name or if it does not provide a "dynamic_libs" method (which is
           implemented by all Alien::Base subclasses).

           [version 0.30] [breaking change]

           Starting with version 0.30, libraries provided by Aliens is preferred over the system libraries.  The
           original thinking was that you want to prefer the system libraries because they are more likely to
           get patched with regular system updates.  Unfortunately, the reason a module needs to install an
           Alien is likely because the system library is not new enough, so we now prefer the Aliens instead.

   assert_lib
        assert_lib(%args);

       This behaves exactly the same as find_lib, except that instead of returning empty list of failure it
       throws an exception.

   check_lib_or_exit
        check_lib_or_exit(%args);

       This behaves exactly the same as assert_lib, except that instead of dying, it warns (with exactly the
       same error message) and exists.  This is intended for use in "Makefile.PL" or "Build.PL"

   find_lib_or_exit
       [version 0.05]

        my(@libs) = find_lib_or_exit(%args);

       This behaves exactly the same as find_lib, except that if the library is not found, it will call exit
       with an appropriate diagnostic.

   find_lib_or_die
       [version 0.06]

        my(@libs) = find_lib_or_die(%args);

       This behaves exactly the same as find_lib, except that if the library is not found, it will die with an
       appropriate diagnostic.

   check_lib
        my $bool = check_lib(%args);

       This behaves exactly the same as find_lib, except that it returns true (1) on finding the appropriate
       libraries or false (0) otherwise.

   which
       [version 0.17]

        my $path = which($name);

       Return the path to the first library that matches the given name.

       Not exported by default.

   where
       [version 0.17]

        my @paths = where($name);

       Return the paths to all the libraries that match the given name.

       Not exported by default.

   has_symbols
       [version 0.17]

        my $bool = has_symbols($path, @symbol_names);

       Returns true if all of the symbols can be found in the dynamic library located at the given path.  Can be
       useful in conjunction with "verify" with "find_lib" above.

       Not exported by default.

   system_path
       [version 0.20]

        my $path = FFI::CheckLib::system_path;

       Returns the system path as a list reference.  On some systems, this is "PATH" on others it might be
       "LD_LIBRARY_PATH" on still others it could be something completely different.  So although you may add
       items to this list, you should probably do some careful consideration before you do so.

       This function is not exportable, even on request.

ENVIRONMENT

       FFI::CheckLib responds to these environment variables:

       FFI_CHECKLIB_PACKAGE
           On macOS platforms with Homebrew <http://brew.sh> and/or MacPorts <https://www.macports.org>
           installed, their corresponding lib paths will be automatically appended to $system_path.  In case of
           having both managers installed, Homebrew will appear before.

           This behaviour can be overridden using the environment variable "FFI_CHECKLIB_PACKAGE".

           Allowed values are:

           - "none": Won't use either Homebrew's path nor MacPorts - "homebrew": Will append "$(brew
           --prefix)/lib" to the system paths - "macports": Will append "port"'s default lib path

           A comma separated list is also valid:

            export FFI_CHECKLIB_PACKAGE=macports,homebrew

           Order matters. So in this example, MacPorts' lib path appears before Homebrew's path.

       FFI_CHECKLIB_PATH
           List of directories that will be considered by FFI::CheckLib as additional "system directories".
           They will be searched before other system directories but after "libpath".  The variable is colon
           separated on Unix and semicolon separated on Windows.  If you use this variable,
           "FFI_CHECKLIB_PACKAGE" will be ignored.

       PATH
           On Windows the "PATH" environment variable will be used as a search path for libraries.

       On some operating systems "LD_LIBRARY_PATH", "DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH", "DYLD_FALLBACK_LIBRARY_PATH" or others
       may be used as part of the search for dynamic libraries and may be used (indirectly) by FFI::CheckLib as
       well.

FAQ

       Why not just use "dlopen"?
           Calling "dlopen" on a library name and then "dlclose" immediately can tell you if you have the exact
           name of a library available on a system.  It does have a number of drawbacks as well.

           No absolute or relative path
               It only tells you that the library is somewhere on the system, not having the absolute or
               relative path makes it harder to generate useful diagnostics.

           POSIX only
               This doesn't work on non-POSIX systems like Microsoft Windows. If you are using a POSIX emulation
               layer on Windows that provides "dlopen", like Cygwin, there are a number of gotchas there as
               well.  Having a layer written in Perl handles this means that developers on Unix can develop FFI
               that will more likely work on these platforms without special casing them.

           inconsistent implementations
               Even on POSIX systems you have inconsistent implementations.  OpenBSD for example don't usually
               include symlinks for ".so" files meaning you need to know the exact ".so" version.

           non-system directories
               By default "dlopen" only works for libraries in the system paths.  Most platforms have a way of
               configuring the search for different non-system paths, but none of them are portable, and are
               usually discouraged anyway.  Alien and friends need to do searches for dynamic libraries in non-
               system directories for "share" installs.

       My 64-bit Perl is misconfigured and has 32-bit libraries in its search path.  Is that a bug in
       FFI::CheckLib?
           Nope.

       The way FFI::CheckLib is implemented it won't work on AIX, HP-UX, OpenVMS or Plan 9.
           I know for a fact that it doesn't work on AIX as currently implemented because I used to develop on
           AIX in the early 2000s, and I am aware of some of the technical challenges.  There are probably other
           systems that it won't work on.  I would love to add support for these platforms.  Realistically these
           platforms have a tiny market share, and absent patches from users or the companies that own these
           operating systems (patches welcome), or hardware / CPU time donations, these platforms are
           unsupportable anyway.

SEE ALSO

       FFI::Platypus
           Call library functions dynamically without a compiler.

       Dist::Zilla::Plugin::FFI::CheckLib
           Dist::Zilla plugin for this module.

AUTHOR

       Author: Graham Ollis <plicease@cpan.org>

       Contributors:

       Bakkiaraj Murugesan (bakkiaraj)

       Dan Book (grinnz, DBOOK)

       Ilya Pavlov (Ilya, ILUX)

       Shawn Laffan (SLAFFAN)

       Petr Písař (ppisar)

       Michael R. Davis (MRDVT)

       Shawn Laffan (SLAFFAN)

       Carlos D. Álvaro (cdalvaro)

       This software is copyright (c) 2014-2022 by Graham Ollis.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.