FlatBuffers
An open source project by FPL.
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The C language binding exists in a separate project named FlatCC.
The flatcc
C schema compiler can generate code offline as well as online via a C library. It can also generate buffer verifiers and fast JSON parsers, printers.
Great care has been taken to ensure compatibily with the main flatc
project.
CI builds recent versions of gcc, clang and MSVC on OS-X, Ubuntu, and Windows, and occasionally older compiler versions. See main project Status.
Other platforms may well work, including Centos, but are not tested regularly.
The monster sample project was specifically written for C99 in order to follow the C++ version and for that reason it will not work with MSVC 2010.
In the tutorial we used the call Monster_create_as_root
to create the root buffer object since this is easier in simple use cases. Sometimes we need more modularity so we can reuse a function to create nested tables and root tables the same way. For this we need the flatcc_builder_buffer_create_call
. It is best to keep flatcc_builder
calls isolated at the top driver level, so we get:
The same principle applies with start/end
vs start/end_as_root
in the top-down approach.
The tutorial uses a bottom up approach. In C it is also possible to use a top-down approach by starting and ending objects nested within each other. In the tutorial there is no deep nesting, so the difference is limited, but it shows the idea:
The C-API does support reading binary schema (.bfbs) files via code generated from the reflection.fbs
schema, and an example usage shows how to use this. The reflection schema files are pre-generated in the runtime distribution.
The C-API does not support mutating reflection like C++ does, nor does the reader interface support mutating scalars (and it is generally unsafe to do so even after verification).
The generated reader interface supports sorting vectors in-place after casting them to a mutating type because it is not practical to do so while building a buffer. This is covered in the builder documentation.
The reflection example makes use of this feature to look up objects by name.
It is possible to build new buffers using complex objects from existing buffers as source. This can be very efficient due to direct copy semantics without endian conversion or temporary stack allocation.
Scalars, structs and strings can be used as source, as well vectors of these.
It is currently not possible to use an existing table or vector of table as source, but it would be possible to add support for this at some point.
The FLATBUFFERS_WRAP_NAMESPACE
approach used in the tutorial is convenient when each function has a very long namespace prefix. But it isn't always the best approach. If the namespace is absent, or simple and informative, we might as well use the prefix directly. The reflection example mentioned above uses this approach.
Not all languages support testing if a field is present, but in C we can elaborate the reader section of the tutorial with tests for this. Recall that mana
was set to the default value 150
and therefore shouldn't be present.
In the tutorial we used a single call to add a union. Here we show different ways to accomplish the same thing. The last form is rarely used, but is the low-level way to do it. It can be used to group small values together in the table by adding type and data at different points in time.
It was considered how the C code generator could be integrated into the flatc
tool, but it would either require that the standalone C implementation of the schema compiler was dropped, or it would lead to excessive code duplication, or a complicated intermediate representation would have to be invented. Neither of these alternatives are very attractive, and it isn't a big deal to use the flatcc
tool instead of flatc
given that the FlatBuffers C runtime library needs to be made available regardless.