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      1 // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
      2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
      3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
      4 
      5 /*
      6 
      7 Cgo enables the creation of Go packages that call C code.
      8 
      9 Using cgo with the go command
     10 
     11 To use cgo write normal Go code that imports a pseudo-package "C".
     12 The Go code can then refer to types such as C.size_t, variables such
     13 as C.stdout, or functions such as C.putchar.
     14 
     15 If the import of "C" is immediately preceded by a comment, that
     16 comment, called the preamble, is used as a header when compiling
     17 the C parts of the package.  For example:
     18 
     19 	// #include <stdio.h>
     20 	// #include <errno.h>
     21 	import "C"
     22 
     23 The preamble may contain any C code, including function and variable
     24 declarations and definitions.  These may then be referred to from Go
     25 code as though they were defined in the package "C".  All names
     26 declared in the preamble may be used, even if they start with a
     27 lower-case letter.  Exception: static variables in the preamble may
     28 not be referenced from Go code; static functions are permitted.
     29 
     30 See $GOROOT/misc/cgo/stdio and $GOROOT/misc/cgo/gmp for examples.  See
     31 "C? Go? Cgo!" for an introduction to using cgo:
     32 https://golang.org/doc/articles/c_go_cgo.html.
     33 
     34 CFLAGS, CPPFLAGS, CXXFLAGS, FFLAGS and LDFLAGS may be defined with pseudo
     35 #cgo directives within these comments to tweak the behavior of the C, C++
     36 or Fortran compiler.  Values defined in multiple directives are concatenated
     37 together.  The directive can include a list of build constraints limiting its
     38 effect to systems satisfying one of the constraints
     39 (see https://golang.org/pkg/go/build/#hdr-Build_Constraints for details about the constraint syntax).
     40 For example:
     41 
     42 	// #cgo CFLAGS: -DPNG_DEBUG=1
     43 	// #cgo amd64 386 CFLAGS: -DX86=1
     44 	// #cgo LDFLAGS: -lpng
     45 	// #include <png.h>
     46 	import "C"
     47 
     48 Alternatively, CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS may be obtained via the pkg-config
     49 tool using a '#cgo pkg-config:' directive followed by the package names.
     50 For example:
     51 
     52 	// #cgo pkg-config: png cairo
     53 	// #include <png.h>
     54 	import "C"
     55 
     56 The default pkg-config tool may be changed by setting the PKG_CONFIG environment variable.
     57 
     58 When building, the CGO_CFLAGS, CGO_CPPFLAGS, CGO_CXXFLAGS, CGO_FFLAGS and
     59 CGO_LDFLAGS environment variables are added to the flags derived from
     60 these directives.  Package-specific flags should be set using the
     61 directives, not the environment variables, so that builds work in
     62 unmodified environments.
     63 
     64 All the cgo CPPFLAGS and CFLAGS directives in a package are concatenated and
     65 used to compile C files in that package.  All the CPPFLAGS and CXXFLAGS
     66 directives in a package are concatenated and used to compile C++ files in that
     67 package.  All the CPPFLAGS and FFLAGS directives in a package are concatenated
     68 and used to compile Fortran files in that package.  All the LDFLAGS directives
     69 in any package in the program are concatenated and used at link time.  All the
     70 pkg-config directives are concatenated and sent to pkg-config simultaneously
     71 to add to each appropriate set of command-line flags.
     72 
     73 When the cgo directives are parsed, any occurrence of the string ${SRCDIR}
     74 will be replaced by the absolute path to the directory containing the source
     75 file. This allows pre-compiled static libraries to be included in the package
     76 directory and linked properly.
     77 For example if package foo is in the directory /go/src/foo:
     78 
     79        // #cgo LDFLAGS: -L${SRCDIR}/libs -lfoo
     80 
     81 Will be expanded to:
     82 
     83        // #cgo LDFLAGS: -L/go/src/foo/libs -lfoo
     84 
     85 When the Go tool sees that one or more Go files use the special import
     86 "C", it will look for other non-Go files in the directory and compile
     87 them as part of the Go package.  Any .c, .s, or .S files will be
     88 compiled with the C compiler.  Any .cc, .cpp, or .cxx files will be
     89 compiled with the C++ compiler.  Any .f, .F, .for or .f90 files will be
     90 compiled with the fortran compiler. Any .h, .hh, .hpp, or .hxx files will
     91 not be compiled separately, but, if these header files are changed,
     92 the C and C++ files will be recompiled.  The default C and C++
     93 compilers may be changed by the CC and CXX environment variables,
     94 respectively; those environment variables may include command line
     95 options.
     96 
     97 The cgo tool is enabled by default for native builds on systems where
     98 it is expected to work.  It is disabled by default when
     99 cross-compiling.  You can control this by setting the CGO_ENABLED
    100 environment variable when running the go tool: set it to 1 to enable
    101 the use of cgo, and to 0 to disable it.  The go tool will set the
    102 build constraint "cgo" if cgo is enabled.
    103 
    104 When cross-compiling, you must specify a C cross-compiler for cgo to
    105 use.  You can do this by setting the CC_FOR_TARGET environment
    106 variable when building the toolchain using make.bash, or by setting
    107 the CC environment variable any time you run the go tool.  The
    108 CXX_FOR_TARGET and CXX environment variables work in a similar way for
    109 C++ code.
    110 
    111 Go references to C
    112 
    113 Within the Go file, C's struct field names that are keywords in Go
    114 can be accessed by prefixing them with an underscore: if x points at a C
    115 struct with a field named "type", x._type accesses the field.
    116 C struct fields that cannot be expressed in Go, such as bit fields
    117 or misaligned data, are omitted in the Go struct, replaced by
    118 appropriate padding to reach the next field or the end of the struct.
    119 
    120 The standard C numeric types are available under the names
    121 C.char, C.schar (signed char), C.uchar (unsigned char),
    122 C.short, C.ushort (unsigned short), C.int, C.uint (unsigned int),
    123 C.long, C.ulong (unsigned long), C.longlong (long long),
    124 C.ulonglong (unsigned long long), C.float, C.double,
    125 C.complexfloat (complex float), and C.complexdouble (complex double).
    126 The C type void* is represented by Go's unsafe.Pointer.
    127 The C types __int128_t and __uint128_t are represented by [16]byte.
    128 
    129 To access a struct, union, or enum type directly, prefix it with
    130 struct_, union_, or enum_, as in C.struct_stat.
    131 
    132 The size of any C type T is available as C.sizeof_T, as in
    133 C.sizeof_struct_stat.
    134 
    135 As Go doesn't have support for C's union type in the general case,
    136 C's union types are represented as a Go byte array with the same length.
    137 
    138 Go structs cannot embed fields with C types.
    139 
    140 Go code cannot refer to zero-sized fields that occur at the end of
    141 non-empty C structs.  To get the address of such a field (which is the
    142 only operation you can do with a zero-sized field) you must take the
    143 address of the struct and add the size of the struct.
    144 
    145 Cgo translates C types into equivalent unexported Go types.
    146 Because the translations are unexported, a Go package should not
    147 expose C types in its exported API: a C type used in one Go package
    148 is different from the same C type used in another.
    149 
    150 Any C function (even void functions) may be called in a multiple
    151 assignment context to retrieve both the return value (if any) and the
    152 C errno variable as an error (use _ to skip the result value if the
    153 function returns void).  For example:
    154 
    155 	n, err = C.sqrt(-1)
    156 	_, err := C.voidFunc()
    157 	var n, err = C.sqrt(1)
    158 
    159 Calling C function pointers is currently not supported, however you can
    160 declare Go variables which hold C function pointers and pass them
    161 back and forth between Go and C. C code may call function pointers
    162 received from Go. For example:
    163 
    164 	package main
    165 
    166 	// typedef int (*intFunc) ();
    167 	//
    168 	// int
    169 	// bridge_int_func(intFunc f)
    170 	// {
    171 	//		return f();
    172 	// }
    173 	//
    174 	// int fortytwo()
    175 	// {
    176 	//	    return 42;
    177 	// }
    178 	import "C"
    179 	import "fmt"
    180 
    181 	func main() {
    182 		f := C.intFunc(C.fortytwo)
    183 		fmt.Println(int(C.bridge_int_func(f)))
    184 		// Output: 42
    185 	}
    186 
    187 In C, a function argument written as a fixed size array
    188 actually requires a pointer to the first element of the array.
    189 C compilers are aware of this calling convention and adjust
    190 the call accordingly, but Go cannot.  In Go, you must pass
    191 the pointer to the first element explicitly: C.f(&C.x[0]).
    192 
    193 A few special functions convert between Go and C types
    194 by making copies of the data.  In pseudo-Go definitions:
    195 
    196 	// Go string to C string
    197 	// The C string is allocated in the C heap using malloc.
    198 	// It is the caller's responsibility to arrange for it to be
    199 	// freed, such as by calling C.free (be sure to include stdlib.h
    200 	// if C.free is needed).
    201 	func C.CString(string) *C.char
    202 
    203 	// Go []byte slice to C array
    204 	// The C array is allocated in the C heap using malloc.
    205 	// It is the caller's responsibility to arrange for it to be
    206 	// freed, such as by calling C.free (be sure to include stdlib.h
    207 	// if C.free is needed).
    208 	func C.CBytes([]byte) unsafe.Pointer
    209 
    210 	// C string to Go string
    211 	func C.GoString(*C.char) string
    212 
    213 	// C data with explicit length to Go string
    214 	func C.GoStringN(*C.char, C.int) string
    215 
    216 	// C data with explicit length to Go []byte
    217 	func C.GoBytes(unsafe.Pointer, C.int) []byte
    218 
    219 As a special case, C.malloc does not call the C library malloc directly
    220 but instead calls a Go helper function that wraps the C library malloc
    221 but guarantees never to return nil. If C's malloc indicates out of memory,
    222 the helper function crashes the program, like when Go itself runs out
    223 of memory. Because C.malloc cannot fail, it has no two-result form
    224 that returns errno.
    225 
    226 C references to Go
    227 
    228 Go functions can be exported for use by C code in the following way:
    229 
    230 	//export MyFunction
    231 	func MyFunction(arg1, arg2 int, arg3 string) int64 {...}
    232 
    233 	//export MyFunction2
    234 	func MyFunction2(arg1, arg2 int, arg3 string) (int64, *C.char) {...}
    235 
    236 They will be available in the C code as:
    237 
    238 	extern int64 MyFunction(int arg1, int arg2, GoString arg3);
    239 	extern struct MyFunction2_return MyFunction2(int arg1, int arg2, GoString arg3);
    240 
    241 found in the _cgo_export.h generated header, after any preambles
    242 copied from the cgo input files. Functions with multiple
    243 return values are mapped to functions returning a struct.
    244 Not all Go types can be mapped to C types in a useful way.
    245 
    246 Using //export in a file places a restriction on the preamble:
    247 since it is copied into two different C output files, it must not
    248 contain any definitions, only declarations. If a file contains both
    249 definitions and declarations, then the two output files will produce
    250 duplicate symbols and the linker will fail. To avoid this, definitions
    251 must be placed in preambles in other files, or in C source files.
    252 
    253 Passing pointers
    254 
    255 Go is a garbage collected language, and the garbage collector needs to
    256 know the location of every pointer to Go memory.  Because of this,
    257 there are restrictions on passing pointers between Go and C.
    258 
    259 In this section the term Go pointer means a pointer to memory
    260 allocated by Go (such as by using the & operator or calling the
    261 predefined new function) and the term C pointer means a pointer to
    262 memory allocated by C (such as by a call to C.malloc).  Whether a
    263 pointer is a Go pointer or a C pointer is a dynamic property
    264 determined by how the memory was allocated; it has nothing to do with
    265 the type of the pointer.
    266 
    267 Go code may pass a Go pointer to C provided the Go memory to which it
    268 points does not contain any Go pointers.  The C code must preserve
    269 this property: it must not store any Go pointers in Go memory, even
    270 temporarily.  When passing a pointer to a field in a struct, the Go
    271 memory in question is the memory occupied by the field, not the entire
    272 struct.  When passing a pointer to an element in an array or slice,
    273 the Go memory in question is the entire array or the entire backing
    274 array of the slice.
    275 
    276 C code may not keep a copy of a Go pointer after the call returns.
    277 
    278 A Go function called by C code may not return a Go pointer.  A Go
    279 function called by C code may take C pointers as arguments, and it may
    280 store non-pointer or C pointer data through those pointers, but it may
    281 not store a Go pointer in memory pointed to by a C pointer.  A Go
    282 function called by C code may take a Go pointer as an argument, but it
    283 must preserve the property that the Go memory to which it points does
    284 not contain any Go pointers.
    285 
    286 Go code may not store a Go pointer in C memory.  C code may store Go
    287 pointers in C memory, subject to the rule above: it must stop storing
    288 the Go pointer when the C function returns.
    289 
    290 These rules are checked dynamically at runtime.  The checking is
    291 controlled by the cgocheck setting of the GODEBUG environment
    292 variable.  The default setting is GODEBUG=cgocheck=1, which implements
    293 reasonably cheap dynamic checks.  These checks may be disabled
    294 entirely using GODEBUG=cgocheck=0.  Complete checking of pointer
    295 handling, at some cost in run time, is available via GODEBUG=cgocheck=2.
    296 
    297 It is possible to defeat this enforcement by using the unsafe package,
    298 and of course there is nothing stopping the C code from doing anything
    299 it likes.  However, programs that break these rules are likely to fail
    300 in unexpected and unpredictable ways.
    301 
    302 Using cgo directly
    303 
    304 Usage:
    305 	go tool cgo [cgo options] [-- compiler options] gofiles...
    306 
    307 Cgo transforms the specified input Go source files into several output
    308 Go and C source files.
    309 
    310 The compiler options are passed through uninterpreted when
    311 invoking the C compiler to compile the C parts of the package.
    312 
    313 The following options are available when running cgo directly:
    314 
    315 	-dynimport file
    316 		Write list of symbols imported by file. Write to
    317 		-dynout argument or to standard output. Used by go
    318 		build when building a cgo package.
    319 	-dynout file
    320 		Write -dynimport output to file.
    321 	-dynpackage package
    322 		Set Go package for -dynimport output.
    323 	-dynlinker
    324 		Write dynamic linker as part of -dynimport output.
    325 	-godefs
    326 		Write out input file in Go syntax replacing C package
    327 		names with real values. Used to generate files in the
    328 		syscall package when bootstrapping a new target.
    329 	-srcdir directory
    330 		Find the Go input files, listed on the command line,
    331 		in directory.
    332 	-objdir directory
    333 		Put all generated files in directory.
    334 	-importpath string
    335 		The import path for the Go package. Optional; used for
    336 		nicer comments in the generated files.
    337 	-exportheader file
    338 		If there are any exported functions, write the
    339 		generated export declarations to file.
    340 		C code can #include this to see the declarations.
    341 	-gccgo
    342 		Generate output for the gccgo compiler rather than the
    343 		gc compiler.
    344 	-gccgoprefix prefix
    345 		The -fgo-prefix option to be used with gccgo.
    346 	-gccgopkgpath path
    347 		The -fgo-pkgpath option to be used with gccgo.
    348 	-import_runtime_cgo
    349 		If set (which it is by default) import runtime/cgo in
    350 		generated output.
    351 	-import_syscall
    352 		If set (which it is by default) import syscall in
    353 		generated output.
    354 	-debug-define
    355 		Debugging option. Print #defines.
    356 	-debug-gcc
    357 		Debugging option. Trace C compiler execution and output.
    358 */
    359 package main
    360 
    361 /*
    362 Implementation details.
    363 
    364 Cgo provides a way for Go programs to call C code linked into the same
    365 address space. This comment explains the operation of cgo.
    366 
    367 Cgo reads a set of Go source files and looks for statements saying
    368 import "C". If the import has a doc comment, that comment is
    369 taken as literal C code to be used as a preamble to any C code
    370 generated by cgo. A typical preamble #includes necessary definitions:
    371 
    372 	// #include <stdio.h>
    373 	import "C"
    374 
    375 For more details about the usage of cgo, see the documentation
    376 comment at the top of this file.
    377 
    378 Understanding C
    379 
    380 Cgo scans the Go source files that import "C" for uses of that
    381 package, such as C.puts. It collects all such identifiers. The next
    382 step is to determine each kind of name. In C.xxx the xxx might refer
    383 to a type, a function, a constant, or a global variable. Cgo must
    384 decide which.
    385 
    386 The obvious thing for cgo to do is to process the preamble, expanding
    387 #includes and processing the corresponding C code. That would require
    388 a full C parser and type checker that was also aware of any extensions
    389 known to the system compiler (for example, all the GNU C extensions) as
    390 well as the system-specific header locations and system-specific
    391 pre-#defined macros. This is certainly possible to do, but it is an
    392 enormous amount of work.
    393 
    394 Cgo takes a different approach. It determines the meaning of C
    395 identifiers not by parsing C code but by feeding carefully constructed
    396 programs into the system C compiler and interpreting the generated
    397 error messages, debug information, and object files. In practice,
    398 parsing these is significantly less work and more robust than parsing
    399 C source.
    400 
    401 Cgo first invokes gcc -E -dM on the preamble, in order to find out
    402 about simple #defines for constants and the like. These are recorded
    403 for later use.
    404 
    405 Next, cgo needs to identify the kinds for each identifier. For the
    406 identifiers C.foo and C.bar, cgo generates this C program:
    407 
    408 	<preamble>
    409 	#line 1 "not-declared"
    410 	void __cgo_f_xxx_1(void) { __typeof__(foo) *__cgo_undefined__; }
    411 	#line 1 "not-type"
    412 	void __cgo_f_xxx_2(void) { foo *__cgo_undefined__; }
    413 	#line 1 "not-const"
    414 	void __cgo_f_xxx_3(void) { enum { __cgo_undefined__ = (foo)*1 }; }
    415 	#line 2 "not-declared"
    416 	void __cgo_f_xxx_1(void) { __typeof__(bar) *__cgo_undefined__; }
    417 	#line 2 "not-type"
    418 	void __cgo_f_xxx_2(void) { bar *__cgo_undefined__; }
    419 	#line 2 "not-const"
    420 	void __cgo_f_xxx_3(void) { enum { __cgo_undefined__ = (bar)*1 }; }
    421 
    422 This program will not compile, but cgo can use the presence or absence
    423 of an error message on a given line to deduce the information it
    424 needs. The program is syntactically valid regardless of whether each
    425 name is a type or an ordinary identifier, so there will be no syntax
    426 errors that might stop parsing early.
    427 
    428 An error on not-declared:1 indicates that foo is undeclared.
    429 An error on not-type:1 indicates that foo is not a type (if declared at all, it is an identifier).
    430 An error on not-const:1 indicates that foo is not an integer constant.
    431 
    432 The line number specifies the name involved. In the example, 1 is foo and 2 is bar.
    433 
    434 Next, cgo must learn the details of each type, variable, function, or
    435 constant. It can do this by reading object files. If cgo has decided
    436 that t1 is a type, v2 and v3 are variables or functions, and c4, c5,
    437 and c6 are constants, it generates:
    438 
    439 	<preamble>
    440 	__typeof__(t1) *__cgo__1;
    441 	__typeof__(v2) *__cgo__2;
    442 	__typeof__(v3) *__cgo__3;
    443 	__typeof__(c4) *__cgo__4;
    444 	enum { __cgo_enum__4 = c4 };
    445 	__typeof__(c5) *__cgo__5;
    446 	enum { __cgo_enum__5 = c5 };
    447 	__typeof__(c6) *__cgo__6;
    448 	enum { __cgo_enum__6 = c6 };
    449 
    450 	long long __cgo_debug_data[] = {
    451 		0, // t1
    452 		0, // v2
    453 		0, // v3
    454 		c4,
    455 		c5,
    456 		c6,
    457 		1
    458 	};
    459 
    460 and again invokes the system C compiler, to produce an object file
    461 containing debug information. Cgo parses the DWARF debug information
    462 for __cgo__N to learn the type of each identifier. (The types also
    463 distinguish functions from global variables.) If using a standard gcc,
    464 cgo can parse the DWARF debug information for the __cgo_enum__N to
    465 learn the identifier's value. The LLVM-based gcc on OS X emits
    466 incomplete DWARF information for enums; in that case cgo reads the
    467 constant values from the __cgo_debug_data from the object file's data
    468 segment.
    469 
    470 At this point cgo knows the meaning of each C.xxx well enough to start
    471 the translation process.
    472 
    473 Translating Go
    474 
    475 Given the input Go files x.go and y.go, cgo generates these source
    476 files:
    477 
    478 	x.cgo1.go       # for gc (cmd/compile)
    479 	y.cgo1.go       # for gc
    480 	_cgo_gotypes.go # for gc
    481 	_cgo_import.go  # for gc (if -dynout _cgo_import.go)
    482 	x.cgo2.c        # for gcc
    483 	y.cgo2.c        # for gcc
    484 	_cgo_defun.c    # for gcc (if -gccgo)
    485 	_cgo_export.c   # for gcc
    486 	_cgo_export.h   # for gcc
    487 	_cgo_main.c     # for gcc
    488 	_cgo_flags      # for alternative build tools
    489 
    490 The file x.cgo1.go is a copy of x.go with the import "C" removed and
    491 references to C.xxx replaced with names like _Cfunc_xxx or _Ctype_xxx.
    492 The definitions of those identifiers, written as Go functions, types,
    493 or variables, are provided in _cgo_gotypes.go.
    494 
    495 Here is a _cgo_gotypes.go containing definitions for needed C types:
    496 
    497 	type _Ctype_char int8
    498 	type _Ctype_int int32
    499 	type _Ctype_void [0]byte
    500 
    501 The _cgo_gotypes.go file also contains the definitions of the
    502 functions.  They all have similar bodies that invoke runtimecgocall
    503 to make a switch from the Go runtime world to the system C (GCC-based)
    504 world.
    505 
    506 For example, here is the definition of _Cfunc_puts:
    507 
    508 	//go:cgo_import_static _cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts
    509 	//go:linkname __cgofn__cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts _cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts
    510 	var __cgofn__cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts byte
    511 	var _cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts = unsafe.Pointer(&__cgofn__cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts)
    512 
    513 	func _Cfunc_puts(p0 *_Ctype_char) (r1 _Ctype_int) {
    514 		_cgo_runtime_cgocall(_cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts, uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&p0)))
    515 		return
    516 	}
    517 
    518 The hexadecimal number is a hash of cgo's input, chosen to be
    519 deterministic yet unlikely to collide with other uses. The actual
    520 function _cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts is implemented in a C source
    521 file compiled by gcc, the file x.cgo2.c:
    522 
    523 	void
    524 	_cgo_be59f0f25121_Cfunc_puts(void *v)
    525 	{
    526 		struct {
    527 			char* p0;
    528 			int r;
    529 			char __pad12[4];
    530 		} __attribute__((__packed__, __gcc_struct__)) *a = v;
    531 		a->r = puts((void*)a->p0);
    532 	}
    533 
    534 It extracts the arguments from the pointer to _Cfunc_puts's argument
    535 frame, invokes the system C function (in this case, puts), stores the
    536 result in the frame, and returns.
    537 
    538 Linking
    539 
    540 Once the _cgo_export.c and *.cgo2.c files have been compiled with gcc,
    541 they need to be linked into the final binary, along with the libraries
    542 they might depend on (in the case of puts, stdio). cmd/link has been
    543 extended to understand basic ELF files, but it does not understand ELF
    544 in the full complexity that modern C libraries embrace, so it cannot
    545 in general generate direct references to the system libraries.
    546 
    547 Instead, the build process generates an object file using dynamic
    548 linkage to the desired libraries. The main function is provided by
    549 _cgo_main.c:
    550 
    551 	int main() { return 0; }
    552 	void crosscall2(void(*fn)(void*, int, uintptr_t), void *a, int c, uintptr_t ctxt) { }
    553 	uintptr_t _cgo_wait_runtime_init_done() { }
    554 	void _cgo_allocate(void *a, int c) { }
    555 	void _cgo_panic(void *a, int c) { }
    556 
    557 The extra functions here are stubs to satisfy the references in the C
    558 code generated for gcc. The build process links this stub, along with
    559 _cgo_export.c and *.cgo2.c, into a dynamic executable and then lets
    560 cgo examine the executable. Cgo records the list of shared library
    561 references and resolved names and writes them into a new file
    562 _cgo_import.go, which looks like:
    563 
    564 	//go:cgo_dynamic_linker "/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2"
    565 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic puts puts#GLIBC_2.2.5 "libc.so.6"
    566 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic __libc_start_main __libc_start_main#GLIBC_2.2.5 "libc.so.6"
    567 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic stdout stdout#GLIBC_2.2.5 "libc.so.6"
    568 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic fflush fflush#GLIBC_2.2.5 "libc.so.6"
    569 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic _ _ "libpthread.so.0"
    570 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic _ _ "libc.so.6"
    571 
    572 In the end, the compiled Go package, which will eventually be
    573 presented to cmd/link as part of a larger program, contains:
    574 
    575 	_go_.o        # gc-compiled object for _cgo_gotypes.go, _cgo_import.go, *.cgo1.go
    576 	_all.o        # gcc-compiled object for _cgo_export.c, *.cgo2.c
    577 
    578 The final program will be a dynamic executable, so that cmd/link can avoid
    579 needing to process arbitrary .o files. It only needs to process the .o
    580 files generated from C files that cgo writes, and those are much more
    581 limited in the ELF or other features that they use.
    582 
    583 In essence, the _cgo_import.o file includes the extra linking
    584 directives that cmd/link is not sophisticated enough to derive from _all.o
    585 on its own. Similarly, the _all.o uses dynamic references to real
    586 system object code because cmd/link is not sophisticated enough to process
    587 the real code.
    588 
    589 The main benefits of this system are that cmd/link remains relatively simple
    590 (it does not need to implement a complete ELF and Mach-O linker) and
    591 that gcc is not needed after the package is compiled. For example,
    592 package net uses cgo for access to name resolution functions provided
    593 by libc. Although gcc is needed to compile package net, gcc is not
    594 needed to link programs that import package net.
    595 
    596 Runtime
    597 
    598 When using cgo, Go must not assume that it owns all details of the
    599 process. In particular it needs to coordinate with C in the use of
    600 threads and thread-local storage. The runtime package declares a few
    601 variables:
    602 
    603 	var (
    604 		iscgo             bool
    605 		_cgo_init         unsafe.Pointer
    606 		_cgo_thread_start unsafe.Pointer
    607 	)
    608 
    609 Any package using cgo imports "runtime/cgo", which provides
    610 initializations for these variables. It sets iscgo to true, _cgo_init
    611 to a gcc-compiled function that can be called early during program
    612 startup, and _cgo_thread_start to a gcc-compiled function that can be
    613 used to create a new thread, in place of the runtime's usual direct
    614 system calls.
    615 
    616 Internal and External Linking
    617 
    618 The text above describes "internal" linking, in which cmd/link parses and
    619 links host object files (ELF, Mach-O, PE, and so on) into the final
    620 executable itself. Keeping cmd/link simple means we cannot possibly
    621 implement the full semantics of the host linker, so the kinds of
    622 objects that can be linked directly into the binary is limited (other
    623 code can only be used as a dynamic library). On the other hand, when
    624 using internal linking, cmd/link can generate Go binaries by itself.
    625 
    626 In order to allow linking arbitrary object files without requiring
    627 dynamic libraries, cgo supports an "external" linking mode too. In
    628 external linking mode, cmd/link does not process any host object files.
    629 Instead, it collects all the Go code and writes a single go.o object
    630 file containing it. Then it invokes the host linker (usually gcc) to
    631 combine the go.o object file and any supporting non-Go code into a
    632 final executable. External linking avoids the dynamic library
    633 requirement but introduces a requirement that the host linker be
    634 present to create such a binary.
    635 
    636 Most builds both compile source code and invoke the linker to create a
    637 binary. When cgo is involved, the compile step already requires gcc, so
    638 it is not problematic for the link step to require gcc too.
    639 
    640 An important exception is builds using a pre-compiled copy of the
    641 standard library. In particular, package net uses cgo on most systems,
    642 and we want to preserve the ability to compile pure Go code that
    643 imports net without requiring gcc to be present at link time. (In this
    644 case, the dynamic library requirement is less significant, because the
    645 only library involved is libc.so, which can usually be assumed
    646 present.)
    647 
    648 This conflict between functionality and the gcc requirement means we
    649 must support both internal and external linking, depending on the
    650 circumstances: if net is the only cgo-using package, then internal
    651 linking is probably fine, but if other packages are involved, so that there
    652 are dependencies on libraries beyond libc, external linking is likely
    653 to work better. The compilation of a package records the relevant
    654 information to support both linking modes, leaving the decision
    655 to be made when linking the final binary.
    656 
    657 Linking Directives
    658 
    659 In either linking mode, package-specific directives must be passed
    660 through to cmd/link. These are communicated by writing //go: directives in a
    661 Go source file compiled by gc. The directives are copied into the .o
    662 object file and then processed by the linker.
    663 
    664 The directives are:
    665 
    666 //go:cgo_import_dynamic <local> [<remote> ["<library>"]]
    667 
    668 	In internal linking mode, allow an unresolved reference to
    669 	<local>, assuming it will be resolved by a dynamic library
    670 	symbol. The optional <remote> specifies the symbol's name and
    671 	possibly version in the dynamic library, and the optional "<library>"
    672 	names the specific library where the symbol should be found.
    673 
    674 	In the <remote>, # or @ can be used to introduce a symbol version.
    675 
    676 	Examples:
    677 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic puts
    678 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic puts puts#GLIBC_2.2.5
    679 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic puts puts#GLIBC_2.2.5 "libc.so.6"
    680 
    681 	A side effect of the cgo_import_dynamic directive with a
    682 	library is to make the final binary depend on that dynamic
    683 	library. To get the dependency without importing any specific
    684 	symbols, use _ for local and remote.
    685 
    686 	Example:
    687 	//go:cgo_import_dynamic _ _ "libc.so.6"
    688 
    689 	For compatibility with current versions of SWIG,
    690 	#pragma dynimport is an alias for //go:cgo_import_dynamic.
    691 
    692 //go:cgo_dynamic_linker "<path>"
    693 
    694 	In internal linking mode, use "<path>" as the dynamic linker
    695 	in the final binary. This directive is only needed from one
    696 	package when constructing a binary; by convention it is
    697 	supplied by runtime/cgo.
    698 
    699 	Example:
    700 	//go:cgo_dynamic_linker "/lib/ld-linux.so.2"
    701 
    702 //go:cgo_export_dynamic <local> <remote>
    703 
    704 	In internal linking mode, put the Go symbol
    705 	named <local> into the program's exported symbol table as
    706 	<remote>, so that C code can refer to it by that name. This
    707 	mechanism makes it possible for C code to call back into Go or
    708 	to share Go's data.
    709 
    710 	For compatibility with current versions of SWIG,
    711 	#pragma dynexport is an alias for //go:cgo_export_dynamic.
    712 
    713 //go:cgo_import_static <local>
    714 
    715 	In external linking mode, allow unresolved references to
    716 	<local> in the go.o object file prepared for the host linker,
    717 	under the assumption that <local> will be supplied by the
    718 	other object files that will be linked with go.o.
    719 
    720 	Example:
    721 	//go:cgo_import_static puts_wrapper
    722 
    723 //go:cgo_export_static <local> <remote>
    724 
    725 	In external linking mode, put the Go symbol
    726 	named <local> into the program's exported symbol table as
    727 	<remote>, so that C code can refer to it by that name. This
    728 	mechanism makes it possible for C code to call back into Go or
    729 	to share Go's data.
    730 
    731 //go:cgo_ldflag "<arg>"
    732 
    733 	In external linking mode, invoke the host linker (usually gcc)
    734 	with "<arg>" as a command-line argument following the .o files.
    735 	Note that the arguments are for "gcc", not "ld".
    736 
    737 	Example:
    738 	//go:cgo_ldflag "-lpthread"
    739 	//go:cgo_ldflag "-L/usr/local/sqlite3/lib"
    740 
    741 A package compiled with cgo will include directives for both
    742 internal and external linking; the linker will select the appropriate
    743 subset for the chosen linking mode.
    744 
    745 Example
    746 
    747 As a simple example, consider a package that uses cgo to call C.sin.
    748 The following code will be generated by cgo:
    749 
    750 	// compiled by gc
    751 
    752 	//go:cgo_ldflag "-lm"
    753 
    754 	type _Ctype_double float64
    755 
    756 	//go:cgo_import_static _cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin
    757 	//go:linkname __cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin _cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin
    758 	var __cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin byte
    759 	var _cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin = unsafe.Pointer(&__cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin)
    760 
    761 	func _Cfunc_sin(p0 _Ctype_double) (r1 _Ctype_double) {
    762 		_cgo_runtime_cgocall(_cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin, uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&p0)))
    763 		return
    764 	}
    765 
    766 	// compiled by gcc, into foo.cgo2.o
    767 
    768 	void
    769 	_cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin(void *v)
    770 	{
    771 		struct {
    772 			double p0;
    773 			double r;
    774 		} __attribute__((__packed__)) *a = v;
    775 		a->r = sin(a->p0);
    776 	}
    777 
    778 What happens at link time depends on whether the final binary is linked
    779 using the internal or external mode. If other packages are compiled in
    780 "external only" mode, then the final link will be an external one.
    781 Otherwise the link will be an internal one.
    782 
    783 The linking directives are used according to the kind of final link
    784 used.
    785 
    786 In internal mode, cmd/link itself processes all the host object files, in
    787 particular foo.cgo2.o. To do so, it uses the cgo_import_dynamic and
    788 cgo_dynamic_linker directives to learn that the otherwise undefined
    789 reference to sin in foo.cgo2.o should be rewritten to refer to the
    790 symbol sin with version GLIBC_2.2.5 from the dynamic library
    791 "libm.so.6", and the binary should request "/lib/ld-linux.so.2" as its
    792 runtime dynamic linker.
    793 
    794 In external mode, cmd/link does not process any host object files, in
    795 particular foo.cgo2.o. It links together the gc-generated object
    796 files, along with any other Go code, into a go.o file. While doing
    797 that, cmd/link will discover that there is no definition for
    798 _cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin, referred to by the gc-compiled source file. This
    799 is okay, because cmd/link also processes the cgo_import_static directive and
    800 knows that _cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin is expected to be supplied by a host
    801 object file, so cmd/link does not treat the missing symbol as an error when
    802 creating go.o. Indeed, the definition for _cgo_gcc_Cfunc_sin will be
    803 provided to the host linker by foo2.cgo.o, which in turn will need the
    804 symbol 'sin'. cmd/link also processes the cgo_ldflag directives, so that it
    805 knows that the eventual host link command must include the -lm
    806 argument, so that the host linker will be able to find 'sin' in the
    807 math library.
    808 
    809 cmd/link Command Line Interface
    810 
    811 The go command and any other Go-aware build systems invoke cmd/link
    812 to link a collection of packages into a single binary. By default, cmd/link will
    813 present the same interface it does today:
    814 
    815 	cmd/link main.a
    816 
    817 produces a file named a.out, even if cmd/link does so by invoking the host
    818 linker in external linking mode.
    819 
    820 By default, cmd/link will decide the linking mode as follows: if the only
    821 packages using cgo are those on a whitelist of standard library
    822 packages (net, os/user, runtime/cgo), cmd/link will use internal linking
    823 mode. Otherwise, there are non-standard cgo packages involved, and cmd/link
    824 will use external linking mode. The first rule means that a build of
    825 the godoc binary, which uses net but no other cgo, can run without
    826 needing gcc available. The second rule means that a build of a
    827 cgo-wrapped library like sqlite3 can generate a standalone executable
    828 instead of needing to refer to a dynamic library. The specific choice
    829 can be overridden using a command line flag: cmd/link -linkmode=internal or
    830 cmd/link -linkmode=external.
    831 
    832 In an external link, cmd/link will create a temporary directory, write any
    833 host object files found in package archives to that directory (renamed
    834 to avoid conflicts), write the go.o file to that directory, and invoke
    835 the host linker. The default value for the host linker is $CC, split
    836 into fields, or else "gcc". The specific host linker command line can
    837 be overridden using command line flags: cmd/link -extld=clang
    838 -extldflags='-ggdb -O3'.  If any package in a build includes a .cc or
    839 other file compiled by the C++ compiler, the go tool will use the
    840 -extld option to set the host linker to the C++ compiler.
    841 
    842 These defaults mean that Go-aware build systems can ignore the linking
    843 changes and keep running plain 'cmd/link' and get reasonable results, but
    844 they can also control the linking details if desired.
    845 
    846 */
    847