The binding generator is part of the gcc compiler and can be invoked via the -fdump-ada-spec switch, which will generate Ada spec files for the header files specified on the command line, and all header files needed by these files transitively. For example:
$ g++ -c -fdump-ada-spec -C /usr/include/time.h $ gcc -c -gnat05 *.ads
will generate, under GNU/Linux, the following files: time_h.ads, bits_time_h.ads, stddef_h.ads, bits_types_h.ads which correspond to the files /usr/include/time.h, /usr/include/bits/time.h, etc..., and will then compile in Ada 2005 mode these Ada specs.
The -C
switch tells gcc to extract comments from headers,
and will attempt to generate corresponding Ada comments.
If you want to generate a single Ada file and not the transitive closure, you can use instead the -fdump-ada-spec-slim switch.
Note that we recommend when possible to use the g++ driver to generate bindings, even for most C headers, since this will in general generate better Ada specs. For generating bindings for C++ headers, it is mandatory to use the g++ command, or gcc -x c++ which is equivalent in this case. If g++ cannot work on your C headers because of incompatibilities between C and C++, then you can fallback to gcc instead.
For an example of better bindings generated from the C++ front-end, the name of the parameters (when available) are actually ignored by the C front-end. Consider the following C header:
extern void foo (int variable);
with the C front-end, variable
is ignored, and the above is handled as:
extern void foo (int);
generating a generic:
procedure foo (param1 : int);
with the C++ front-end, the name is available, and we generate:
procedure foo (variable : int);
In some cases, the generated bindings will be more complete or more meaningful when defining some macros, which you can do via the -D switch. This is for example the case with Xlib.h under GNU/Linux:
g++ -c -fdump-ada-spec -DXLIB_ILLEGAL_ACCESS -C /usr/include/X11/Xlib.h
The above will generate more complete bindings than a straight call without the -DXLIB_ILLEGAL_ACCESS switch.
In other cases, it is not possible to parse a header file in a stand-alone
manner, because other include files need to be included first. In this
case, the solution is to create a small header file including the needed
#include
and possible #define
directives. For example, to
generate Ada bindings for readline/readline.h, you need to first
include stdio.h, so you can create a file with the following two
lines in e.g. readline1.h:
#include <stdio.h> #include <readline/readline.h>
and then generate Ada bindings from this file:
$ g++ -c -fdump-ada-spec readline1.h