wsetzer@mindspring.com
2004-Sep-20 18:10 UTC
[Rd] problem typcasting return of R_ExternalPtrAddr(SEXP s)
In the odesolve routine lsoda(), I allow the function (named func) that calculates the system of differential equations to be defined in a dll that has been dynamically loaded from the file named in dllname. I use getNativeSymbolInfo(func, dllname)$address to get the address of the function and pass it to a C function called via the .Call interface. Inside that C function, I use R_ExternalPtrAddr(deriv_func) to get the function pointer. This requires typcasting the return value of R_ExternalPtrAddr from (void *) to (deriv_func *), defined in a typedef in call_lsoda(). To be more explicit (I'm replacing irrelevant arguments with ellipses): In lsoda(...,func,dllname,...), func contains a string giving the name of a function which is defined in the dll whose name is contained in dllname. inside lsoda() are lines like func <- getNativeSymbolInfo(symbol.C(func),PACKAGE=dllname) .Call("call_lsoda",...,func) inside call_lsoda.c are the lines: SEXP func; typedef void deriv_func(long int *, double *,double *, double *); derivs = (deriv_func *) R_ExternalPtrAddr(func); This all worked up to now, but now, (as Kurt Hornik kindly informs me) gcc 3.4 gives the warning: warning: ISO C forbids conversion of object pointer to function pointer type so I need to clean this up so odesolve will compile cleanly for version 2.0.0 of R. I'm at a loss of what to do, though, since the return value of R_ExternalPtrAddr is (void *), and I need a function pointer. I'd guess there would need to be a special function (say declared as ( R_ExternalFnPtr(SEXP s) *)(), or something like that), to make all this work, but I can't find such a function. My C programming is pretty rusty, so I'm wondering if someone has an idea about how I can get around this problem (or perhaps I've misunderstood the meaning of the error message? ) Woody Setzer
Prof Brian Ripley
2004-Sep-20 18:55 UTC
[Rd] problem typcasting return of R_ExternalPtrAddr(SEXP s)
It's a warning, and occurs several times in R itself. I don't think it is fatal to live with it. There exists systems on which function pointers are not simple pointers, but probably none of them run R -- and they do not support dynamic loading of packages' DLLs if they do. On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 wsetzer@mindspring.com wrote:> In the odesolve routine lsoda(), I allow the function (named func) that calculates the system of differential equations to be defined in a dll that has been dynamically loaded from the file named in dllname. I use getNativeSymbolInfo(func, dllname)$address to get the address of the function and pass it to a C function called via the .Call interface. Inside that C function, I use R_ExternalPtrAddr(deriv_func) to get the function pointer. This requires typcasting the return value of R_ExternalPtrAddr from (void *) to (deriv_func *), defined in a typedef in call_lsoda(). > > To be more explicit (I'm replacing irrelevant arguments with ellipses): > In lsoda(...,func,dllname,...), func contains a string giving the name of a function which is defined in the dll whose name is contained in dllname. > > inside lsoda() are lines like > func <- getNativeSymbolInfo(symbol.C(func),PACKAGE=dllname) > > .Call("call_lsoda",...,func) > > inside call_lsoda.c are the lines: > SEXP func; > > typedef void deriv_func(long int *, double *,double *, double *); > > derivs = (deriv_func *) R_ExternalPtrAddr(func); > > > This all worked up to now, but now, (as Kurt Hornik kindly informs me) gcc 3.4 gives the warning: > > warning: ISO C forbids conversion of object pointer to function pointer type > > so I need to clean this up so odesolve will compile cleanly for version 2.0.0 of R. I'm at a loss of what to do, though, since the return value of R_ExternalPtrAddr is (void *), and I need a function pointer. > > I'd guess there would need to be a special function (say declared as > ( R_ExternalFnPtr(SEXP s) *)(), > or something like that), to make all this work, but I can't find such a function. My C programming is pretty rusty, so I'm wondering if someone has an idea about how I can get around this problem (or perhaps I've misunderstood the meaning of the error message? )-- Brian D. Ripley, ripley@stats.ox.ac.uk Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/ University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self) 1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA) Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595