CSC/ECE 517 Spring 2014/ch1 1w1h jg: Difference between revisions

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make
make
</pre>
</pre>
*'''Creat a file named extconf.rb'''
*'''generate'''
<pre>
.so under UNIX/Linux
.so under Windows when building with Cygwin
.bundle under Mac OS X
</pre>
 
=== RubyInline ===
=== RubyInline ===



Revision as of 21:18, 4 February 2014

Ruby libraries to load objects of other languages at run time

Ruby is a dynamic, reflective, object-oriented, general-purpose programming language. It is easy to extend Ruby with new features by writing code in Ruby. But every now and then extending ruby with low-level languages, such asC/C++/Java is also necessary.

Currently, various kinds of languages codes could be invoked from within ruby. The extension for C/C++ and Java are focused here.

Ruby C/C++ extensions<ref>http://java.ociweb.com/mark/NFJS/RubyCExtensions.pdf</ref>

By extending Ruby with C. The C libraries could be used directly in Ruby applications. Ruby could call C codes in three ways: interpreter API, RubyInline, SWIG.

interpreter API

Ruby interpreter is implemented in C, its API can be used and no special API added for interacting with C like Java’s JNI is needed. For this usage, platform-specific Makefiles for compiling C extensions to Ruby is needed to be generated firstly. A simple sample is like below

  • Creat a file named extconf.rb
require 'mkmf'
extension_name = 'name'
dir_config(extension_name)
create_makefile(extension_name)
  • use by running
ruby extconf.rb
make
  • generate
.so under UNIX/Linux
.so under Windows when building with Cygwin
.bundle under Mac OS X

RubyInline

SWIG

Ruby JAVA extensions