×

Compilers for high level languages generate code that follow certain conventions. These conventions are necessary, in part, for separate compilation to work. One such convention is the "calling convention". The calling convention is a set of assumptions made by the compiler about where function arguments will be found on entry to a function. A calling convention also specifies where the return value for a function is found. Some programs may not know at the time of compilation what arguments are to be passed to a function. For instance, an interpreter may be told at run-time about the number and types of arguments used to call a given function. `Libffi' can be used in such programs to provide a bridge from the interpreter program to compiled code. The `libffi' library provides a portable, high level programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written in one language to call code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only provides the lowest, machine dependent layer of a fully featured foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that handles type conversions for values passed between the two languages.

Uploaded Tue Apr 1 01:36:34 2025
md5 checksum dc81667848c8ee8e3d5575b6e3786241
build 5
build_number 5
depends glibc-amzn2-aarch64 2.26
license MIT and Public Domain
license_family MIT
md5 dc81667848c8ee8e3d5575b6e3786241
name libffi-amzn2-aarch64
noarch generic
sha1 12aa46141677757b6fa33cf0b9c3eff4c176049e
sha256 6a7e4baa73c5e5a8c6ba365e220a9e0e7617aee1eb4075d38344af07fac0f7b2
size 27268
subdir noarch
timestamp 1620060666966
version 3.0.13