NAME
Affix - A Foreign Function Interface eXtension
SYNOPSIS
use v5.40;
use Affix;
# Load a Library
my $lib = load_library(libm); # libm.so / msvcrt.dll
# Bind a Function
# double pow(double x, double y);
affix $lib, 'pow', [ Double, Double ] => Double;
# Call it
say pow( 2.0, 10.0 ); # 1024
# Allocate 1KiB of raw memory
my $ptr = Affix::malloc(1024);
# Write raw data to the pointer
Affix::memcpy( $ptr, 'test', 4 );
# Poiner arithmetic creates a new reference (doesn't modify original)
my $offset_ptr = Affix::ptr_add( $ptr, 12 );
Affix::memcpy( $offset_ptr, 'test', 4 );
# Inspect memory with a hex dump to STDOUT
Affix::dump( $ptr, 32 );
# Release the memory
Affix::free($ptr);
DESCRIPTION
Affix is a high-performance Foreign Function Interface (FFI) for Perl. It allows you to load dynamic libraries (DLLs, shared objects) and call their functions natively without writing XS code or configuring a C compiler.
It distinguishes itself from other FFI solutions by using infix, a custom lightweight JIT engine. When you bind a function, Affix generates machine code at runtime (a 'trampoline') to handle the argument marshalling. This results in significantly lower overhead than generic FFI wrappers that rely on dynamic dispatch per-call.
EXPORTS
Affix exports standard types (Int, Double, etc.) and core functions (affix, wrap, load_library) by default.
You can control imports using tags:
use Affix qw[:all]; # Import everything
use Affix qw[:lib]; # Library helpers (libc, libm, load_library...)
use Affix qw[:memory]; # malloc, free, memcpy, cast, dump...
use Affix qw[:pin]; # Variable binding (pin, unpin)
use Affix qw[:types]; # Types only (Int, Struct, Pointer...)
Core API
Affix's API is designed to be expressive. Let's start at the beginning with the eponymous affix( ... ) function.
affix( ... )
Attaches a symbol from a library to a named perl subroutine in the current namespace.
# Standard: Load from library
affix $lib, 'pow', [ Double, Double ] => Double;
# Rename: Load 'pow', install as 'power'
affix $lib, [ pow => 'power' ], [ Double, Double ] => Double;
# Raw pointer: Bind a specific memory address (vtables, JIT, dlsym, etc.)
affix undef, [ $ptr => 'my_func' ], [Int] => Void;
Parameters:
$lib-
A library handle returned by
load_library( $path ), a path string, orundef(searches the main executable/process). $symbol_name-
The name of the function to find. Pass an array list (
['real_name', 'alias']) to rename it in Perl. $parameters-
An array reference of argument types. See Types for the full list.
$return-
A single return type for the function.
On success, affix( ... ) installs the subroutine and returns the generated code reference.
wrap( ... )
Creates a wrapper around a given symbol and returns it as an anonymous CODE reference.
# From library
my $pow = wrap $lib, 'pow', [ Double, Double ] => Double;
# Call the function
my $result = $pow->( 2, 5 );
# From a raw pointer
# Note: Library argument is undef
my $func = wrap undef, $ptr, [Int] => Void;
Arguments are nearly identical to affix( ... ) except you cannot provide an alias for the function name.
pin( ... )
my $scalar;
# Bind $scalar to the global integer variable 'errno' in libc
pin $scalar, libc(), 'errno', Int;
$scalar = 0; # Writes to C memory
sysopen( ... );
say $scalar; # Reads from C memory
Variables exported by a library (global/extern variables) can be accessed using pin. Reading the scalar reads the memory; writing to it writes to the memory.
Parameters:
$var-
The scalar to bind.
$lib-
The library handle.
$symbol-
Name of the exported variable.
$type-
The type of data the variable contains.
unpin( ... )
unpin $errno;
Removes the magic applied by pin( ... ) to a variable. The variable retains its last value but is no longer linked to C memory.
typedef( ... )
typedef MyType => Struct[ name => String, age => Int ];
# Now use it in signatures
affix $lib, 'func', [ MyType() ] => Void;
Registers a named type alias. This is required for:
- 1. Recursive Types: A struct that contains a pointer to itself.
- 2. Reusability: Defining a complex signature once and using it in multiple functions.
- 3. Smart Enums: Generating Perl constants in your package.
coerce( $type, $value )
Used primarily with Variadic Functions. It wraps a value with type information so Affix knows how to marshal it when no compile-time signature is available.
# Hint that we are passing a Float, not a Double
coerce( Float, 1.5 );
get_last_error_message( )
Returns a string describing the most recent error that occurred during library loading or symbol lookup.
Library Utilities
Locating libraries on different platforms can be tricky. These utilities help you load and manage dynamic libraries.
They are exported by default but may be imported specifically with the :lib tag.
load_library( $path )
my $lib = load_library( 'user32.dll' );
Locates and loads a dynamic library, returning an opaque (Affix::Lib) handle.
If you pass a name without an extension (e.g., 'm'), Affix applies platform-specific prefixes/suffixes (e.g., 'libm.so', 'libm.dylib', 'm.dll') and searches standard system paths.
locate_lib( $name, [$version] )
my $path = locate_lib('ssl', '1.1');
Searches system paths (LD_LIBRARY_PATH, PATH, DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH, etc.) and returns the full absolute path to the library file without loading it.
find_symbol( $lib, $name )
Returns the raw memory address (as an integer) of a symbol. Useful if you need to pass a function pointer value to C, rather than calling it.
libc() / libm()
Helpers returning handles to the standard C library and math library.
Memory Management
Affix uses pins to manage raw memory. A pin is a magical scalar reference holding a memory address and type information.
malloc( $size )
my $ptr = malloc( 1024 );
Allocates $size bytes of uninitialized memory. Returns a Pointer[Void] pin.
calloc( $num, $size_or_type )
my $array = calloc( 10, Int );
Allocates memory for an array of $count elements and initializes them to zero. You may pass a Type object (like Int) or a raw size in bytes.
realloc( $ptr, $new_size )
$ptr = realloc( $ptr, $new_size );
Resizes the memory pointed to by $ptr. Returns the new pointer (the original pin is updated automatically).
free( $ptr )
free( $ptr );
Releases memory allocated by Affix.
Note: Only use this on memory allocated by malloc, calloc, or strdup. Do not attempt to free pointers returned by C libraries unless the library documentation explicitly says you own that memory.
cast( $ptr, $type )
my $void = malloc(4);
my $int = cast( $void, Int ); # Read immediate value
my $int_p = cast( $void, Pointer[Int] ); # Return new Pin
Reinterprets a pointer.
To value (
Int, etc.): Reads the memory immediately and returns a Perl scalar.To reference (
Pointer[Int]): Returns a new pin aliasing the memory. Dereferencing it ($$pin) reads/writes the value.
own( $ptr, [$bool] )
own( $ptr, $bool );
Controls lifecycle management.
own($p, 1): Perl owns the memory; `free()` is called when `$p` goes out of scope.own($p, 0): Perl releases ownership. Useful when handing memory off to a C function.
address( $ptr )
Returns the virtual memory address of the pointer as a UInt64.
Pointer Arithmetic & Utilities
ptr_add( $ptr, $offset )-
Returns a new unmanaged pin offset by
$bytes. If$ptris an array type, it decays to a pointer type. ptr_diff( $ptr1, $ptr2 )-
Returns the difference in bytes (
$ptr1 - $ptr2). is_null( $ptr )-
Returns true if the pointer is
NULL(0x0). strdup( $string )-
Allocates memory and copies the Perl string (plus
NULLterminator) into it. strnlen( $ptr, $maxlen )-
Safe string length calculation.
Raw Memory Operatoins
Standard C memory operations are available for high-performance manipulation of pins.
memchr( $ptr, $ch, $count )memcmp( $lhs, $rhs, $count )memset( $dest, $ch, $count )memcpy( $dest, $src, $count )memmove( $dest, $src, $count )
dump( $ptr, $length )
Prints a hex dump of the memory at $ptr to STDOUT.
Introspection
sizeof( $type )
my $size = sizeof( Int );
my $size_rect = sizeof( Struct[ x => Int, y => Int ] );
Returns the size, in bytes, of a Type object.
offsetof( $struct_type, $field_name )
my $struct = Struct[ name => String, age => Int ];
my $offset = offsetof( $struct, 'age' );
Returns the byte offset of a field within a Struct or Union.
alignof( $type )
Returns the required alignment bytes for a Type.
types()
Returns a list of all named types currently registered in the system.
Types
Affix signatures are built using these helper functions
# Example Signature
[ Int, String ] => Void
Primitive Types
Primitives map to native C types.
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Void | Returns nothing |
| Bool | Mapped to Perl true/false |
| Char | signed char (8-bit usually) |
| UChar | unsigned char |
| SChar | Explicitly signed char |
| Short | signed short |
| UShort | unsigned short |
| Int | signed int (platform native, usually 32-bit) |
| UInt | unsigned int |
| Long | signed long (32-bit on Win64, 64-bit on Linux64) |
| ULong | unsigned long |
| LongLong | signed long long (guaranteed 64-bit) |
| ULongLong | unsigned long long |
| Float | 32-bit float |
| Double | 64-bit float |
| LongDouble | Platform specific (80-bit or 128-bit) |
| Size_t | size_t |
| SSize_t | ssize_t |
Explicit Width Types
For precise control, use these types which are guaranteed to have specific bit widths across all platforms:
Int8, UInt8
Int16, UInt16
Int32, UInt32
Int64, UInt64
Int128, UInt128 (Passed as Decimal Strings)
128-bit integers, if supported by the compiler, must be passed as strings to/from Perl.
Pointers
Pointers are the glue of C. Affix provides distinct ways to handle them based on intent.
- Basic Pointers (
Pointer[Type]) -
When a function expects
int*ordouble*, pass a reference to a scalar.# C: void split_float(double val, int* whole, double* frac); affix $lib, 'split_float', [ Double, Pointer[Int], Pointer[Double] ] => Void; my ($whole, $frac); split_float( 3.14, \$whole, \$frac );Affix automatically:
- Strings (
StringvsPointer[Char]) -
String: Use this forconst char*(input strings). Affix copies the Perl string to a temporary C buffer.Pointer[Char]: Use this for mutable stringschar*. You must ensure the scalar passed has enough pre-allocated capacity (e.g. using"\0" x 1024).
- Void Pointers (
Pointer[Void]) -
Used for opaque handles or generic data.
Pass
undefto sendNULL.Pass a reference
\$scalarto send the address of that scalar.Pass a Pin (from
mallocorcast) to pass that memory address directly.
Pins (Managed Pointers)
For manual memory management, use malloc, calloc, or cast. These return Pins. A Pin is a reference to a scalar holding the memory address, blessed with magic.
my $ptr = malloc(1024); # Allocate 1024 bytes
my $view = cast($ptr, Int); # Treat it as an integer
$$view = 123; # Write 123 to the memory
free($ptr); # Free it manually (optional, GC handles it otherwise)
Special Types
Buffer-
Passes a pointer to the raw string buffer of a Perl scalar. Useful for "Zero-Copy" or "Direct-Write" C functions that populate a buffer.
# C: void get_data(char *buf, int len); affix $lib, 'get_data', [ Buffer, Int ] => Void; my $buf = "\0" x 1024; # Pre-allocate get_data($buf, 1024);Warning: The scalar must be writable and have sufficient pre-allocated capacity.
File-
Represents the standard C
FILEstructure. UsePointer[File]to map a Perl filehandle (Glob or IO object) toFILE*.affix $lib, 'fprintf', [ Pointer[File], String ] => Int; open my $fh, '>', 'log.txt'; fprintf($fh, "Hello from Affix!"); PerlIO-
Represents the internal
PerlIOstructure. UsePointer[PerlIO]when the C function expectsPerlIO*. SockAddr-
Safe marshalling for packed socket addresses (e.g. from
Socket::pack_sockaddr_in). Passed to C asstruct sockaddr*. String-
Alias for
const char*. Affix automatically handles UTF-8 encoding (Perl to C) and decoding (C to Perl). StringList-
Maps a Perl Array Reference of strings (
[ "a", "b" ]) to a null-terminatedchar**array (common in C APIs likeexecveormain(argc, argv)).affix $lib, 'process_args', [ StringList ] => Int; process_args( [ "arg1", "arg2" ] ); SV-
The raw Perl Interpreter Object (
SV). Use this if you are writing a function that manipulates Perl internals directly. Note that this must always be a pointer:Pointer[SV]. WString-
Alias for
const wchar_t*. Affix handles the complexity of UTF-16 (Windows) vs UTF-32 (Linux/macOS) and Surrogate Pairs automatically.
Aggregates
Structs
Structs are the bread and butter of C APIs. In Affix, they map to Perl Hash References.
# C: typedef struct { int x; int y; } Point;
# void draw_line(Point a, Point b);
# Define the type (recommended for reuse)
typedef Point => Struct [
x => Int,
y => Int
];
# Bind the function
affix $lib, 'draw_line', [ Point, Point ] => Void;
# Call with HashRefs
draw_line( { x => 0, y => 0 }, { x => 100, y => 100 } );
Nested Structs: Affix handles deep structures automatically.
typedef Rect => Struct [
top_left => Point,
bottom_right => Point,
color => Int
];
draw_rect({
top_left => { x => 10, y => 10 },
bottom_right => { x => 50, y => 50 },
color => 0xFF0000
});
Unions
Maps to Perl hash references with a single key.
# C: union Event { int key_code; float pressure; };
typedef Event => Union [
key_code => Int,
pressure => Float
];
# Pass an integer
handle_event( { key_code => 27 } );
# Pass a float
handle_event( { pressure => 0.5 } );
Packed [ $align, $aggregate ]-
Defines a struct with specific byte alignment (e.g.
#pragma pack(1)).Packed [ 1, Struct[ name => Pointer[Char], # ...etc. ] ];
Working with Arrays
- Fixed-Size Arrays (
Array[Type, N]) -
Fixed-size C arrays are mapped to Perl Array References. Affix handles the decay to pointers and automatically writes back changes to your Perl array.
# C: void process_matrix(int matrix[9]); affix $lib, 'process_matrix', [ Array[Int, 9] ] => Void; # Pass a reference to a Perl array process_matrix( [1..9] ); - Binary Data
-
For arrays of bytes (
Array[UChar]orArray[UInt8]), Affix treats the data as a raw binary blob. Dereferencing a Pin of this type yields a binary string, reading exactly the number of bytes specified.For arrays of characters (
Array[Char]orArray[SInt8]), Affix treats the data as a C String, reading until the first null terminator or the array limit.
SIMD Vectors
Vectors (e.g. __m128 on x86, float32x4_t on ARM) are first-class types in Affix. You can interact with them in two ways:
- 1. Array References: Simplest to read and write.
- 2. Packed Strings: Highest performance (avoids marshalling overhead).
# C: typedef float v4f __attribute__((vector_size(16)));
# v4f add_vecs(v4f a, v4f b);
affix $lib, 'add_vecs', [ Vector[4, Float], Vector[4, Float] ] => Vector[4, Float];
# Option 1: Array References (Convenient)
my $res = add_vecs( [1, 2, 3, 4], [10, 20, 30, 40] );
# $res is [11.0, 22.0, 33.0, 44.0]
# Option 2: Packed Strings (Fast)
# Useful for tight loops, graphics, or physics math
my $packed_a = pack('f4', 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0);
my $packed_b = pack('f4', 10.0, 20.0, 30.0, 40.0);
# Pass binary strings directly
my $res_ref = add_vecs( $packed_a, $packed_b );
Enumerations
typedef Status => Enum [
[ OK => 0 ],
'ERROR', # Auto-increments to 1
[ FLAG_A => 1 << 0 ], # Bit shifting
[ FLAG_B => '1 << 1' ], # String expression
[ FLAG_C => 'FLAG_B << 1' ] # References previous keys
];
Defines a C enum backed by an integer.
Constants:
typedefinstalls constants (likeOK) into your package.Dualvars: Values returned from C are dual-typed.
OKbehaves as the integer0in numeric operations, but prints as the string"OK".Calculated Values: You can use string expressions to define values. These are evaluated at definition time.
Variadic Functions (VarArgs)
Affix supports C functions that take a variable number of arguments, like printf.
# C: int printf(const char* format, ...);
affix libc, 'printf', [ String, VarArgs ] => Int;
When calling a variadic function, Affix performs dynamic type inference at runtime for the extra arguments:
Perl Integers ->
int64_tPerl Floats ->
double(Standard C promotion rules)Perl Strings ->
char*
printf("Hello %s, count is %d\n", "World", 123);
Hinting Types with coerce()
Sometimes standard inference isn't enough (e.g., passing a float instead of double, or passing a Struct by value). Use coerce($type, $value) to explicitly hint the type.
# Passing a struct by value to a variadic function
typedef Point => Struct [ x=>Int, y=>Int ];
my $p = { x => 10, y => 20 };
# Without coerce(), $p would likely be treated as an error or generic pointer
my_variadic_func( "Point: %P", coerce( Point(), $p ) );
Callbacks
You can pass Perl subroutines to C functions that expect function pointers.
# C: void set_handler( void (*callback)(int status, const char* msg) );
affix $lib, 'set_handler',
[ Callback[ [Int, String] => Void ] ] => Void;
set_handler(sub ($status, $msg) {
say "Received status $status: $msg";
});
Note: The callback is valid only as long as the C function holds onto it. If the C library stores the function pointer globally, ensure your Perl code keeps the reference alive if necessary (though Affix handles the trampoline lifecycle automatically for the duration of the call).
Utilities
errno()
my $err = errno();
die "Error $err: " . int($err);
Access the errno (Linux/Unix) or GetLastError (Windows) from the most recent FFI call. This must be called immediately after the function invokes to ensure accuracy.
The return value is a dualvar:
Numeric context: Returns the integer error code.
String context: Returns the human-readable system error message (via
strerrororFormatMessage).
sv_dump( $sv )
Dumps the internal flags and structure of a Perl SV.
EXAMPLES
See The Affix Cookbook for comprehensive guides to using Affix.
SEE ALSO
FFI::Platypus, C::DynaLib, XS::TCC, C::Blocks
All the heavy lifting is done by infix, my JIT compiler and type introspection engine.
AUTHOR
Sanko Robinson <sanko@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2023-2026 by Sanko Robinson.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License 2.0.