objc-sys
Raw Rust bindings to the Objective-C runtime and ABI.
This crate is part of the objc2 project,
see that for related crates.
Runtime Support
Objective-C has a runtime, different implementations of said runtime exist,
and they act in slightly different ways. By default, Apple platforms link to
Apple's runtime, but if you're using another runtime you must tell it to this
library using feature flags (you might have to disable the default apple
feature first).
One could ask, why even bother supporting other runtimes? To that, there's a simple answer: Robustness. By testing with these alternative runtimes in CI, we become by extension much more confident that our implementation doesn't rely on brittle unspecified behaviour, and works across different macOS and iOS versions.
Apple's objc4
- Feature flag:
apple.
This is used by default, and naturally has the highest support priority (e.g.
all of objc2/icrate will work with this runtime).
The supported runtime version (higher versions lets the compiler enable newer
optimizations, at the cost of not supporting older operating systems) can be
chosen using the standard X_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET environment variables:
- macOS:
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET- Default:
10.7,11.0on Aarch64 - Minimum:
10.7
- Default:
- iOS / iPadOS:
IPHONEOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET- Default:
7.0 - Minimum:
5.0(theoretically)
- Default:
- tvOS:
TVOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET- Default:
7.0 - Minimum:
5.0(theoretically)
- Default:
- watchOS:
WATCHOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET- Default:
5.0 - Minimum:
1.0(theoretically)
- Default:
The default versions are the same as those Rust itself has.
GNUStep's libobjc2
- Feature flag:
gnustep-1-7,gnustep-1-8,gnustep-1-9,gnustep-2-0andgnustep-2-1depending on the version you're using. Recommended default isgnustep-1-8.
Microsoft's WinObjC
- Feature flag:
unstable-winobjc.
Unstable: Hasn't been tested on Windows yet!
This is essentially just a fork based
on GNUStep's libobjc2 version 1.8, with very few user-facing changes.
ObjFW
- Feature flag:
unstable-objfw.
Unstable: Doesn't work yet!
TODO.
Other runtimes
This library will probably only ever support "Modern" Objective-C
runtimes, since support for reference-counting primitives like objc_retain
and objc_autoreleasePoolPop is a vital requirement for most applications.
Just so we're being clear, this rules out the GCC libobjc
runtime (see this), the mulle-objc runtime and
cocotron. (But support for darling may be added).
More information on different runtimes can be found in GNUStep's
Objective-C Compiler and Runtime FAQ.
Advanced linking configuration
This crate defines the links key in Cargo.toml so it's possible to
change the linking to libobjc, see the relevant cargo docs.
In the future, this crate may vendor the required source code to automatically build and link to the runtimes. Choosing static vs. dynamic linking here may also become an option.
Objective-C Compiler configuration
Objective-C compilers like clang and gcc requires configuring the calling
ABI to the runtime you're using:
clanguses the-fobjc-runtimeflag, of which there are a few different options.gccuses the-fgnu-runtimeor-fnext-runtimeoptions. Note that Modern Objective-C features are ill supported.
This is relevant if you're building and linking to custom Objective-C sources
in a build script. To assist in compiling Objective-C sources, this crate's
build script expose the DEP_OBJC_0_3_CC_ARGS environment variable to
downstream build scripts.
Example usage in your build.rs (using the cc crate) would be as follows:
Design choices
It is recognized that the most primary consumer of this library will be macOS
and secondly iOS applications. Therefore it was chosen not to use bindgen in
our build script to not add compilation cost to those targets.1
Deprecated functions are also not included for future compability, since they could be removed in any macOS release, and then our code would break. If you have a need for these, please open an issue and we can discuss it!
Some items (in particular the objc_msgSend_X family) have cfgs that prevent
their usage on different platforms; these are semver-stable in the sense
that they will only get less restrictive, never more.
1: That said, most of this is created with the help of bindgen's
commandline interface, so huge thanks to them!