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# Beneath std | ||
# Beneath `std` | ||
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This section documents (or will document) features that are provided by the standard library and | ||
that `#![no_std]` developers have to deal with (i.e. provide) to build `#![no_std]` binary crates. A | ||
(likely incomplete) list of such features is shown below: | ||
This section documents features that are normally provided by the `std` crate and | ||
that `#![no_std]` developers have to deal with (i.e. provide) to build | ||
`#![no_std]` binary crates. | ||
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- `#[lang = "eh_personality"]` | ||
- `#[lang = "start"]` | ||
- `#[lang = "termination"]` | ||
- `#[panic_implementation]` | ||
## Using `libc` | ||
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In order to build a `#[no_std]` executable we will need `libc` as a dependency. | ||
We can specify this using our `Cargo.toml` file: | ||
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```toml | ||
[dependencies] | ||
libc = { version = "0.2.146", default-features = false } | ||
``` | ||
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Note that the default features have been disabled. This is a critical step - | ||
**the default features of `libc` include the `std` crate and so must be | ||
disabled.** | ||
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Alternatively, we can use the unstable `rustc_private` private feature together | ||
with an `extern crate libc;` declaration as shown in the examples below. | ||
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## Writing an executable without `std` | ||
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We will probably need a nightly version of the compiler to produce | ||
a `#![no_std]` executable because on many platforms, we have to provide the | ||
`eh_personality` [lang item], which is unstable. | ||
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Controlling the entry point is possible in two ways: the `#[start]` attribute, | ||
or overriding the default shim for the C `main` function with your own. | ||
Additionally, it's required to define a [panic handler function](panic-handler.html). | ||
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The function marked `#[start]` is passed the command line parameters | ||
in the same format as C (aside from the exact integer types being used): | ||
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```rust | ||
#![feature(start, lang_items, core_intrinsics, rustc_private)] | ||
#![allow(internal_features)] | ||
#![no_std] | ||
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// Necessary for `panic = "unwind"` builds on some platforms. | ||
#![feature(panic_unwind)] | ||
extern crate unwind; | ||
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// Pull in the system libc library for what crt0.o likely requires. | ||
extern crate libc; | ||
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use core::panic::PanicInfo; | ||
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// Entry point for this program. | ||
#[start] | ||
fn main(_argc: isize, _argv: *const *const u8) -> isize { | ||
0 | ||
} | ||
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// These functions are used by the compiler, but not for an empty program like this. | ||
// They are normally provided by `std`. | ||
#[lang = "eh_personality"] | ||
fn rust_eh_personality() {} | ||
#[panic_handler] | ||
fn panic_handler(_info: &PanicInfo) -> ! { core::intrinsics::abort() } | ||
``` | ||
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To override the compiler-inserted `main` shim, we have to disable it | ||
with `#![no_main]` and then create the appropriate symbol with the | ||
correct ABI and the correct name, which requires overriding the | ||
compiler's name mangling too: | ||
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```rust | ||
#![feature(lang_items, core_intrinsics, rustc_private)] | ||
#![allow(internal_features)] | ||
#![no_std] | ||
#![no_main] | ||
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// Necessary for `panic = "unwind"` builds on some platforms. | ||
#![feature(panic_unwind)] | ||
extern crate unwind; | ||
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// Pull in the system libc library for what crt0.o likely requires. | ||
extern crate libc; | ||
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use core::ffi::{c_char, c_int}; | ||
use core::panic::PanicInfo; | ||
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// Entry point for this program. | ||
#[no_mangle] // ensure that this symbol is included in the output as `main` | ||
extern "C" fn main(_argc: c_int, _argv: *const *const c_char) -> c_int { | ||
0 | ||
} | ||
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// These functions are used by the compiler, but not for an empty program like this. | ||
// They are normally provided by `std`. | ||
#[lang = "eh_personality"] | ||
fn rust_eh_personality() {} | ||
#[panic_handler] | ||
fn panic_handler(_info: &PanicInfo) -> ! { core::intrinsics::abort() } | ||
``` | ||
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If you are working with a target that doesn't have binary releases of the | ||
standard library available via rustup (this probably means you are building the | ||
`core` crate yourself) and need compiler-rt intrinsics (i.e. you are probably | ||
getting linker errors when building an executable: | ||
``undefined reference to `__aeabi_memcpy'``), you need to manually link to the | ||
[`compiler_builtins` crate] to get those intrinsics and solve the linker errors. | ||
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[`compiler_builtins` crate]: https://crates.io/crates/compiler_builtins | ||
[lang item]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/unstable-book/language-features/lang-items.html |