CXX Error Handling: QR Example
The QR code generator is an example where a boolean is used to communicate success vs failure, and where the successful result can be passed across the FFI boundary:
#[cxx::bridge(namespace = "qr_code_generator")]
mod ffi {
extern "Rust" {
fn generate_qr_code_using_rust(
data: &[u8],
min_version: i16,
out_pixels: Pin<&mut CxxVector<u8>>,
out_qr_size: &mut usize,
) -> bool;
}
}
Students may be curious about the semantics of the out_qr_size
output. This is
not the size of the vector, but the size of the QR code (and admittedly it is a
bit redundant - this is the square root of the size of the vector).
It may be worth pointing out the importance of initializing out_qr_size
before
calling into the Rust function. Creation of a Rust reference that points to
uninitialized memory results in Undefined Behavior (unlike in C++, when only the
act of dereferencing such memory results in UB).
If students ask about Pin
, then explain why CXX needs it for mutable
references to C++ data: the answer is that C++ data can’t be moved around like
Rust data, because it may contain self-referential pointers.