com.sun.jna.FunctionMapper Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/* Copyright (c) 2007 Timothy Wall, All Rights Reserved
*
* The contents of this file is dual-licensed under 2
* alternative Open Source/Free licenses: LGPL 2.1 or later and
* Apache License 2.0. (starting with JNA version 4.0.0).
*
* You can freely decide which license you want to apply to
* the project.
*
* You may obtain a copy of the LGPL License at:
*
* http://www.gnu.org/licenses/licenses.html
*
* A copy is also included in the downloadable source code package
* containing JNA, in file "LGPL2.1".
*
* You may obtain a copy of the Apache License at:
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/
*
* A copy is also included in the downloadable source code package
* containing JNA, in file "AL2.0".
*/
package com.sun.jna;
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
/** Provides mapping of Java method names to native function names.
* An instance of this interface may be provided to
* {@link Native#load(String, Class, java.util.Map)} as an entry in
* the options map with key {@link Library#OPTION_FUNCTION_MAPPER}.
*
* There are several circumstances where this option might prove useful.
*
* - C preprocessor macros are used to allow C code to refer to a library
* function by a different name
*
- Generated linker symbols are different than those used in C code.
* Windows
stdcall
functions, for instance, are exported with a
* special suffix that describes the stack size of the function arguments
* (see {@link com.sun.jna.win32.StdCallFunctionMapper}).
* - The naming of the C library methods conflicts horribly with your
* Java coding standards, or are otherwise hard to follow. It's generally
* better to keep the original function names in this case, to avoid confusion
* about what's actually being called, but the option is available.
*
*
* @see Library#OPTION_FUNCTION_MAPPER
*/
public interface FunctionMapper {
String getFunctionName(NativeLibrary library, Method method);
}
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