Application Binary Interface
A D implementation that conforms to the D ABI (Application Binary Interface) will be able to generate libraries, DLL's, etc., that can interoperate with D binaries built by other implementations.
C ABI
The C ABI referred to in this specification means the C Application Binary Interface of the target system. C and D code should be freely linkable together, in particular, D code shall have access to the entire C ABI runtime library.
Endianness
The endianness (byte order) of the layout of the data will conform to the endianness of the target machine. The Intel x86 CPUs are little endian meaning that the value 0x0A0B0C0D is stored in memory as: 0D 0C 0B 0A.
Basic Types
bool | 8 bit byte with the values 0 for false and 1 for true |
byte | 8 bit signed value |
ubyte | 8 bit unsigned value |
short | 16 bit signed value |
ushort | 16 bit unsigned value |
int | 32 bit signed value |
uint | 32 bit unsigned value |
long | 64 bit signed value |
ulong | 64 bit unsigned value |
cent | 128 bit signed value |
ucent | 128 bit unsigned value |
float | 32 bit IEEE 754 floating point value |
double | 64 bit IEEE 754 floating point value |
real | implementation defined floating point value, for x86 it is 80 bit IEEE 754 extended real |
Delegates
Delegates are fat pointers with two parts:
offset | property | contents |
---|---|---|
0 | .ptr | context pointer |
ptrsize | .funcptr | pointer to function |
The context pointer can be a class this reference, a struct this pointer, a pointer to a closure (nested functions) or a pointer to an enclosing function's stack frame (nested functions).
Structs
Conforms to the target's C ABI struct layout.
Classes
An object consists of:
size | property | contents |
---|---|---|
ptrsize | .__vptr | pointer to vtable |
ptrsize | .__monitor | monitor |
... | ... | super's non-static fields and super's interface vptrs, from least to most derived |
... | named fields | non-static fields |
ptrsize... | vptr's for any interfaces implemented by this class in left to right, most to least derived, order |
The vtable consists of:
size | contents |
---|---|
ptrsize | pointer to instance of TypeInfo |
ptrsize... | pointers to virtual member functions |
Casting a class object to an interface consists of adding the offset of the interface's corresponding vptr to the address of the base of the object. Casting an interface ptr back to the class type it came from involves getting the correct offset to subtract from it from the object.Interface entry at vtbl[0]. Adjustor thunks are created and pointers to them stored in the method entries in the vtbl[] in order to set the this pointer to the start of the object instance corresponding to the implementing method.
An adjustor thunk looks like:
ADD EAX,offset
JMP method
The leftmost side of the inheritance graph of the interfaces all share their vptrs, this is the single inheritance model. Every time the inheritance graph forks (for multiple inheritance) a new vptr is created and stored in the class' instance. Every time a virtual method is overridden, a new vtbl[] must be created with the updated method pointers in it.
The class definition:
class XXXX {
....
};
Generates the following:
- An instance of Class called ClassXXXX.
- A type called StaticClassXXXX which defines all the static members.
- An instance of StaticClassXXXX called StaticXXXX for the static members.
Interfaces
An interface is a pointer to a pointer to a vtbl[]. The vtbl[0] entry is a pointer to the corresponding instance of the object.Interface class. The rest of the vtbl[1..$] entries are pointers to the virtual functions implemented by that interface, in the order that they were declared.
A COM interface differs from a regular interface in that there is no object.Interface entry in vtbl[0]; the entries vtbl[0..$] are all the virtual function pointers, in the order that they were declared. This matches the COM object layout used by Windows.
A C++ interface differs from a regular interface in that it matches the layout of a C++ class using single inheritance on the target machine.
Arrays
A dynamic array consists of:
offset | property | contents |
---|---|---|
0 | .length | array dimension |
size_t | .ptr | pointer to array data |
A dynamic array is declared as:
type[] array;
whereas a static array is declared as:
type[dimension] array;
Thus, a static array always has the dimension statically available as part of the type, and so it is implemented like in C. Static array's and Dynamic arrays can be easily converted back and forth to each other.
Associative Arrays
Associative arrays consist of a pointer to an opaque, implementation defined type. The current implementation is contained in and defined by rt/aaA.d.
Reference Types
D has reference types, but they are implicit. For example, classes are always referred to by reference; this means that class instances can never reside on the stack or be passed as function parameters.
When passing a static array to a function, the result, although declared as a static array, will actually be a reference to a static array. For example:
int[3] abc;
Passing abc to functions results in these implicit conversions:
void func(int[3] array); // actually <reference to><array[3] of><int>
void func(int* p); // abc is converted to a pointer
// to the first element
void func(int[] array); // abc is converted to a dynamic array
Name Mangling
D accomplishes typesafe linking by mangling a D identifier to include scope and type information.
MangledName:
_D QualifiedName Type
_D QualifiedName M Type
QualifiedName:
SymbolName
SymbolName QualifiedName
SymbolName:
LName
TemplateInstanceName
The M means that the symbol is a function that requires a this pointer.
Template Instance Names have the types and values of its parameters encoded into it:
TemplateInstanceName:
Number __T LName TemplateArgs Z
TemplateArgs:
TemplateArg
TemplateArg TemplateArgs
TemplateArg:
T Type
V Type Value
S LName
Value:
n
Number
i Number
N Number
e HexFloat
c HexFloat c HexFloat
A Number Value...
S Number Value...
HexFloat:
NAN
INF
NINF
N HexDigits P Exponent
HexDigits P Exponent
Exponent:
N Number
Number
HexDigits:
HexDigit
HexDigit HexDigits
HexDigit:
Digit
A
B
C
D
E
F
- n
- is for null arguments.
- Number
- is for positive numeric literals (including character literals).
- N Number
- is for negative numeric literals.
- e HexFloat
- is for real and imaginary floating point literals.
- c HexFloat c HexFloat
- is for complex floating point literals.
- Width Number _ HexDigits
- Width is whether the characters are 1 byte (a), 2 bytes (w) or 4 bytes (d) in size. Number is the number of characters in the string. The HexDigits are the hex data for the string.
- A Number Value...
- An array or asssociative array literal. Number is the length of the array. Value is repeated Number times for a normal array, and 2 * Number times for an associative array.
- S Number Value...
- A struct literal. Value is repeated Number times.
Name:
Namestart
Namestart Namechars
Namestart:
_
Alpha
Namechar:
Namestart
Digit
Namechars:
Namechar
Namechar Namechars
A Name is a standard D identifier.
LName:
Number Name
Number:
Digit
Digit Number
Digit:
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
An LName is a name preceded by a Number giving the number of characters in the Name.
Type Mangling
Types are mangled using a simple linear scheme:
Type:
Shared
Const
Immutable
Wild
TypeArray
TypeNewArray
TypeStaticArray
TypeAssocArray
TypePointer
TypeFunction
TypeIdent
TypeClass
TypeStruct
TypeEnum
TypeTypedef
TypeDelegate
TypeNone
TypeVoid
TypeByte
TypeUbyte
TypeShort
TypeUshort
TypeInt
TypeUint
TypeLong
TypeUlong
TypeFloat
TypeDouble
TypeReal
TypeIfloat
TypeIdouble
TypeIreal
TypeCfloat
TypeCdouble
TypeCreal
TypeBool
TypeChar
TypeWchar
TypeDchar
TypeTuple
Shared:
O Type
Const:
x Type
Immutable:
y Type
Wild:
Ng Type
TypeArray:
A Type
TypeNewArray:
Ne Type
TypeStaticArray:
G Number Type
TypeAssocArray:
H Type Type
TypePointer:
P Type
TypeFunction:
CallConvention FuncAttrs Arguments ArgClose Type
CallConvention:
F // D
U // C
W // Windows
V // Pascal
R // C++
FuncAttrs:
FuncAttr
FuncAttr FuncAttrs
FuncAttr:
empty
FuncAttrPure
FuncAttrNothrow
FuncAttrProperty
FuncAttrRef
FuncAttrTrusted
FuncAttrSafe
FuncAttrPure:
Na
FuncAttrNothrow:
Nb
FuncAttrRef:
Nc
FuncAttrProperty:
Nd
FuncAttrTrusted:
Ne
FuncAttrSafe:
Nf
Arguments:
Argument
Argument Arguments
Argument:
Argument2
M Argument2 // scope
Argument2:
Type
J Type // out
K Type // ref
L Type // lazy
ArgClose
X // variadic T t...) style
Y // variadic T t,...) style
Z // not variadic
TypeIdent:
I QualifiedName
TypeClass:
C QualifiedName
TypeStruct:
S QualifiedName
TypeEnum:
E QualifiedName
TypeTypedef:
T QualifiedName
TypeDelegate:
D TypeFunction
TypeNone:
n
TypeVoid:
v
TypeByte:
g
TypeUbyte:
h
TypeShort:
s
TypeUshort:
t
TypeInt:
i
TypeUint:
k
TypeLong:
l
TypeUlong:
m
TypeFloat:
f
TypeDouble:
d
TypeReal:
e
TypeIfloat:
o
TypeIdouble:
p
TypeIreal:
j
TypeCfloat:
q
TypeCdouble:
r
TypeCreal:
c
TypeBool:
b
TypeChar:
a
TypeWchar:
u
TypeDchar:
w
TypeTuple:
B Number Arguments
Function Calling Conventions
The extern (C) and extern (D) calling convention matches the C calling convention used by the supported C compiler on the host system. Except that the extern (D) calling convention for Windows x86 is described here.
Register Conventions
- EAX, ECX, EDX are scratch registers and can be destroyed by a function.
- EBX, ESI, EDI, EBP must be preserved across function calls.
- EFLAGS is assumed destroyed across function calls, except for the direction flag which must be forward.
- The FPU stack must be empty when calling a function.
- The FPU control word must be preserved across function calls.
- Floating point return values are returned on the FPU stack. These must be cleaned off by the caller, even if they are not used.
Return Value
- The types bool, byte, ubyte, short, ushort, int, uint, pointer, Object, and interfaces are returned in EAX.
- long and ulong are returned in EDX,EAX, where EDX gets the most significant half.
- float, double, real, ifloat, idouble, ireal are returned in ST0.
- cfloat, cdouble, creal are returned in ST1,ST0 where ST1 is the real part and ST0 is the imaginary part.
- Dynamic arrays are returned with the pointer in EDX and the length in EAX.
- Associative arrays are returned in EAX.
- References are returned as pointers in EAX.
- Delegates are returned with the pointer to the function in EDX and the context pointer in EAX.
- 1, 2 and 4 byte structs are returned in EAX.
- 8 byte structs are returned in EDX,EAX, where EDX gets the most significant half.
- For other struct sizes, the return value is stored through a hidden pointer passed as an argument to the function.
- Constructors return the this pointer in EAX.
Parameters
The parameters to the non-variadic function:
foo(a1, a2, ..., an);
are passed as follows:
a1 |
a2 |
... |
an |
hidden |
this |
where hidden is present if needed to return a struct value, and this is present if needed as the this pointer for a member function or the context pointer for a nested function.
The last parameter is passed in EAX rather than being pushed on the stack if the following conditions are met:
- It fits in EAX.
- It is not a 3 byte struct.
- It is not a floating point type.
Parameters are always pushed as multiples of 4 bytes, rounding upwards, so the stack is always aligned on 4 byte boundaries. They are pushed most significant first. out and ref are passed as pointers. Static arrays are passed as pointers to their first element. On Windows, a real is pushed as a 10 byte quantity, a creal is pushed as a 20 byte quantity. On Linux, a real is pushed as a 12 byte quantity, a creal is pushed as two 12 byte quantities. The extra two bytes of pad occupy the ‘most significant’ position.
The callee cleans the stack.
The parameters to the variadic function:
void foo(int p1, int p2, int[] p3...)
foo(a1, a2, ..., an);
are passed as follows:
p1 |
p2 |
a3 |
hidden |
this |
The variadic part is converted to a dynamic array and the rest is the same as for non-variadic functions.
The parameters to the variadic function:
void foo(int p1, int p2, ...)
foo(a1, a2, a3, ..., an);
are passed as follows:
an |
... |
a3 |
a2 |
a1 |
_arguments |
hidden |
this |
The caller is expected to clean the stack. _argptr is not passed, it is computed by the callee.
Exception Handling
Windows
Conforms to the Microsoft Windows Structured Exception Handling conventions.
Linux
FreeBSD and OS X,Uses static address range/handler tables. It is not compatible with the ELF/Mach-O exception handling tables. The stack is walked assuming it uses the EBP/RBP stack frame convention. The EBP/RBP convention must be used for every function that has an associated EH (Exception Handler) table.
For each function that has exception handlers, an EH table entry is generated.
field | description |
---|---|
void* | pointer to start of function |
DHandlerTable* | pointer to corresponding EH data |
uint | size in bytes of the function |
The EH table entries are placed into the following special segments, which are concatenated by the linker.
Operating System | Segment Name |
---|---|
Windows | FI |
Linux | .deh_eh |
FreeBSD | .deh_eh |
OS X | __deh_eh, __DATA |
The rest of the EH data can be placed anywhere, it is immutable.
field | description |
---|---|
void* | pointer to start of function |
uint | offset of ESP/RSP from EBP/RBP |
uint | offset from start of function to return code |
uint | number of entries in DHandlerInfo[] |
DHandlerInfo[] | array of handler information |
field | description |
---|---|
uint | offset from function address to start of guarded section |
uint | offset of end of guarded section |
int | previous table index |
uint | if != 0 offset to DCatchInfo data from start of table |
void* | if not null, pointer to finally code to execute |
field | description |
---|---|
uint | number of entries in DCatchBlock[] |
DCatchBlock[] | array of catch information |
field | description |
---|---|
ClassInfo | catch type |
uint | offset from EBP/RBP to catch variable |
void* | catch handler code |
Garbage Collection
The interface to this is found in phobos/internal/gc.
Runtime Helper Functions
These are found in phobos/internal.
Module Initialization and Termination
All the static constructors for a module are aggregated into a single function, and a pointer to that function is inserted into the ctor member of the ModuleInfo instance for that module.
All the static denstructors for a module are aggregated into a single function, and a pointer to that function is inserted into the dtor member of the ModuleInfo instance for that module.
Unit Testing
All the unit tests for a module are aggregated into a single function, and a pointer to that function is inserted into the unitTest member of the ModuleInfo instance for that module.
Symbolic Debugging
D has types that are not represented in existing C or C++ debuggers. These are dynamic arrays, associative arrays, and delegates. Representing these types as structs causes problems because function calling conventions for structs are often different than that for these types, which causes C/C++ debuggers to misrepresent things. For these debuggers, they are represented as a C type which does match the calling conventions for the type. The dmd compiler will generate only C symbolic type info with the -gc compiler switch.
D type | C representation |
---|---|
dynamic array | unsigned long long |
associative array | void* |
delegate | long long |
dchar | unsigned long |
For debuggers that can be modified to accept new types, the following extensions help them fully support the types.
Codeview Debugger Extensions
The D dchar type is represented by the special primitive type 0x78.
D makes use of the Codeview OEM generic type record indicated by LF_OEM (0x0015). The format is:
field size | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
D Type | Leaf Index | OEM Identifier | recOEM | num indices | type index | type index |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
dynamic array | LF_OEM | OEM | 1 | 2 | @index | @element |
associative array | LF_OEM | OEM | 2 | 2 | @key | @element |
delegate | LF_OEM | OEM | 3 | 2 | @this | @function |
Where:
OEM | 0x42 |
index | type index of array index |
key | type index of key |
element | type index of array element |
this | type index of context pointer |
function | type index of function |
These extensions can be pretty-printed by obj2asm.
The Ddbg debugger supports them.
Dwarf Debugger Extensions
The following leaf types are added:
D type | Identifier | Value | Format |
---|---|---|---|
dynamic array | DW_TAG_darray_type | 0x41 | DW_AT_type is element type |
associative array | DW_TAG_aarray_type | 0x42 | DW_AT_type, is element type, DW_AT_containing_type key type |
delegate | DW_TAG_delegate_type | 0x43 | DW_AT_type, is function type, DW_AT_containing_type is ‘this’ type |
These extensions can be pretty-printed by dumpobj.
The ZeroBUGS debugger supports them.
Note that these Dwarf extensions have been removed as they conflict with recent gcc additions.