How to use a provided DLL file with HPP header? - c++

I’m currently having some problems trying to implement an integration with a Verifone PoS.
The bank we are working with provided us with one .dll file, one .h file and one .hpp file.
I’m usually a Java or PHP developer, so for the last days I consumed everything I found on the web about DLL files and how to use them, but none seemed to work so far. I got a lot of errors, many of them being something like “invalid dll”.
I found on the web that alongside a dll file there should have been a .lib file. I asked the third party about this, but apparently
There is no .lib file. The .dll file contains all the required info for an integration
From their documentation of library I found this:
The form of the supplied binary is a dynamic library. By its nature, a dynamic library allows for easier updates and corrections, not requiring recompilation or relinking of the client (calling) code, as long as the procedures prototypes (function parameters and return types) remain the same.
The language used for the library implementation is C++.
To access the functionalities implemented in the library binary, a C-style header interface is provided. This is comprised of the function prototypes available to be called as well as the types of the result-structures through which the returned data needs to be interpreted to make sense for the previously accessed functionality (the specific requested transaction).
So yeah, the .h file includes only the data types, and the .hpp file contains some declarations that looks like this:
extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) bool doSomething(int param);
Also in their documentation there is an example of how an implemetation should look (and it is fairly simple):
bool someVar = doSomething(1);
It looks like those functions can be called as simple as that, but they cannot. If I try to do that I get an “undefined function” (or similar) error.
At this point the only thing that seemed to have somehow worked (maybe) is loading the DLL with the LoadLibrary function. But besides the fact that whatever function I try to call, with whatever parameters, it returns false, it seems kind of wrong that I do not use the .hpp file at all.
So here we are. How I should aproach this? Is there a way to load the DLL and use the provided HPP file as function definitions? If not, is there another way beside LoadLibrary + GetProcAddress combo to do this?
Thank you!

I'm assuming the dll is a native dll, not a managed assembly (.net dll).
Usually, the dll author adds a preprocessor definition to the build system, like DLL_EXPORT. So if the author compiles the dll, the import library (a small .lib file) will contain all functions that used the DLL_API macro. Then the author can ship the very same header to a user. Because that user won't have the DLL_EXPORT macro defined, DLL_API will resolve to a dllimport, which basically says that the annotated function is defined in the import library.
Such a header might look like this (the whole #if condition is usually in its own header file which is then included in all headers that export functions):
#ifdef DLL_EXPORT
# define DLL_API __declspec(dllexport)
#else
# define DLL_API __declspec(dllimport)
#endif
extern "C"
{
void DLL_API SomeFunction(int x);
void DLL_API AnotherFunction(int x);
}
If the author builds the project (in msvc) the compiler will generate the dll file and a small .lib file, which is the import library. This lib will essentially do what you have to do now: calling LoadLibrary and GetProcAddress to resolve all the functions that have been annotated with __declspec(dllexport).
The following part is a bit speculative and I'm guessing a bit here.
All __declspec(dllimport) does, is tell consumers that this dll contains those functions. But the linker has to link a declaration to its definition (implementation) so the function must be defined somewhere at compiletime. And that place is the import library (.lib). If you don't link with the import library, you will get a linker error when you build your project.
This means simply changing the dllexport to a dllimport won't solve your problems. Without an import library your only option is to load the dll manually with LoadLibrary and search for each function.
If I were you, I'd ask the author for an example project that uses the dll. AFAIK, the only ways to use a native dll is either by linking to an import library or by loading everything manually.
Manually generating the import library from the dll
I've tested this to make sure it works.
First of all, fix the header file to either use the macros like I did in the example above, or just use dllimport directly.
Second, open the developer command prompt for VS and follow the steps from this answer. Make sure to use the correct file names and target architecture (x64 or x86). Now you should have a .lib file.
Thrid, add the lib to your project.
Add the directory of the lib (place it somewhere close to the project so you can use relative paths). Open the project properties and follow the steps in this image:
Make sure that Configuration and Platform are correct (you probably want it like in the image). You can also use relative paths. Click on the Macros button to see all predefined paths available to you.
Add the lib to the linker dependencies:
Put the header somewhere in your project where you can access it.
Now you can simply include the header anywhere in your project and use the functions declared inside it. But note that the dll file has to be placed somewhere where LoadLibrary can find it. Preferably this is the same directory where your project's executable is located.
Bonus facts
The definition file (.def) is actually very simple. The def file for my sample code above is:
LIBRARY MyLibrary
EXPORTS
AnotherFunction
SomeFunction
If I remove the extern "C" block around my declarations, my function names will be mangled and the def file looks like this:
LIBRARY MyLibrary
EXPORTS
?AnotherFunction##YAXH#Z
?SomeFunction##YAXH#Z
If you put those functions inside a namespace (for example FooSpace), that namespace name will also be part of the function name:
LIBRARY MyLibrary
EXPORTS
?AnotherFunction#FooSpace##YAXH#Z
?SomeFunction#FooSpace##YAXH#Z
Note that all extern "C" entities will ignore namespaces, meaning all extern "C" functions, variables, types, ... will be put into the global namespace, no matter if you define them inside a namespace or not.
These are also the names that you'd have to pass to GetProcAddress if you did it manually.

Related

How do I get started writing DLLs in visual C++?

As the title says, although I guess what I really mean is "And using them later."
The Setup
I have followed this answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/13219631/696407
which creates a very simple dll
#include <stdio.h>
extern "C"
{
__declspec(dllexport) void DisplayHelloFromMyDLL()
{
printf ("Hello DLL.\n");
}
}
and I now have a dll compiled for release:
DllTest.dll
DllTest.exp
DllTest.lib
DllTest.pdb
When I run DllTest.dll through dumpbin, I find this line:
1 0 00001000 DisplayHelloFromMyDLL = _DisplayHelloFromMyDLL
USING THE DLL
To use that function in a new solution, I believe I must
Start a project in a new solution
Add the location of the DLL to the project under
Properties
Configuration Properties
Linker
General
Additional Library Directories
Add the .lib file under
Properties
Configuration Properties
Linker
Input
Additional Dependencies
and, having added the .lib there, the next step is... hvæt?
My code right now:
#include "stdafx.h"
int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
{
while(1)
{
DisplayHelloFromMyDLL();
}
return 0;
}
but that doesn't work.
EDIT: I guess "doesn't work" is vague. The function gets Error: identifier "DisplayHelloFromMyDLL" is undefined
(Side question: Is my function called DisplayHelloFromMyDLL(); or _DisplayHelloFromMyDLL();?)
You need .h for compiler (use with #include, and add the folder to .h file as relative path to Configuration Properties > C/C++ > General > Additional Include Directories). Aside from .lib for linker you also need .dll to actually run the test application.
EDIT: There are two types of DLL's that you can make. First are C-like DLL's, with functions that have signatures as if they are written in C instead of in C++. All Windows DLL's (user32.dll, shell32.dll, version.dll) are built as such. The other are C++ DLL's, with functions that are part of the class. MFC and Standard C++ Libraries are such.
If you want to make a C++ DLL then you have to declare all classes that are part of interface as __declspec(dllexport) in your DLL project and __declspec(dllimport) in all projects that would use DLL. Usually the same file is used for this, but with a macro that is defined accordingly to one or the other. If you create a DLL from Visual Studio project template you would see this code.
Your case is actually the simpler case, as you want C-like DLL. You don't have to fiddle with this __declspec rubbish, but you need one additional .def file in DLL project. This should be the content of the .def file:
LIBRARY MyApi
EXPORTS
DisplayHelloFromMyDLL
Your header file (.h file) should look like this:
#pragma once
#ifndef HELLO_DLL_INCLUDED
#define HELLO_DLL_INCLUDED
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
void DisplayHelloFromMyDLL();
#ifdef __cplusplus
};
#endif
#endif // HELLO_DLL_INCLUDED
__declspec(dllimport) tells the compiler that this function (or class) is defined somewhere else, and that linker will find it and link it. __declspec(dllexport) tells the compiler (and linker) that this function (or class) should be exported and be part of DLL interface. If class has neither of those then it's just a class that should be defined in the same project.
To consume your .dll you need two things, a header file and a .lib.
The header file is so that the compiler knows there is a function somewhere with the name DisplayHelloFromMyDLL(). At this point it doesn't matter where it is, just that you've told the compiler it's somewhere. The linker will take care of the where bit.
The .lib file is for the linker. It tells the linker that DisplayHelloFromMyDLL() lives in a .dll, and that (in your case) the name of the dll is DllTest.dll. When your program starts up the Windows loader will use this information to load the .dll into your process and will perform any address fixups to make sure that calling DisplayHelloFromMyDLL() in your application calls the function in your .dll.
You don't actually need the .dll in order to build your executable, only to run it.

When building a dll, can the lib be used for linking?

I wanted to create a C++ dll (to be used in a dot net application). Some functionality I needed was already implemented in another C++ dll.
The dll I was referencing was set up like this (including the comment):
extern "C"
{
__declspec(dllexport) BOOL SomeFunctionToBeUsedExternally();
}
// internal functions
BOOL OtherFunctions();
I need to use one of the OtherFunctions in my code.
So, I added the proper include in my own code, added dependencies on the lib created by the dll above, and used the method I needed. As a result, of course, I got another __declspec(dllexport)... function.
It refused to link though, I got an error about the OtherFunction.
I verified everything, looked online - nothing seems to solve my problem.
Then, I added a __declspec(dllexport) in front of the function I needed, and it works.
I don't understand though. I thought, the dllexport marked functions will be exported to the dll, but aren't all functions sent to the lib ?
Why do I have to export functions to the dll, if I am not linking against the dll but against the lib ?
No, the linker does not automatically export all identifiers. The dllexport attribute tells the linker which identifiers are exported. Without this you would be forced to either export every identifier in the DLL or specify which identifiers should not be exported. When the linker creates the DLL it also creates an import library and includes information about which identifiers are exported based on that attribute.
When you want to use a DLL you need link with the appropriate .lib file for good reason. The .lib file tells the linker which identifiers are exported, the name of the DLL they are in and other information. It is also possible to export identifiers from the DLL by ordinal instead of by name. In this case the linker still needs to match the identifier with the appropriate ordinal. This is only possible by having an accompanying library file that contains that information since it is not present in DLL's export table.
No, only exported functions end up in the .lib. As you can tell.
It is not a static link library, it the import library for the DLL. It is a very simple and very small file since it contains no code at all. Just a list of the exported functions. The linker needs it to resolve the external in the client code, it needs to know the name of the DLL and the actual exported function name or ordinal (could be different) so it can add the entry to client's import table. Import libraries having the same filename extension as static libraries was perhaps a bit unfortunate.

How do I fix an Unresolved External Symbol error in my C++ DLL?

I have a dll, which accesses some classes outside of its project (I'm using Visual Studio, so I have two projects). The thing is, in the header that the dll includes, which is outside of the dll's project, there are only bodies of functions, like this:
x.h
class x
{
void myFunc();
}
And in another cpp file, outside of the dll file:
#include "x.h"
x::myFunc()
{
//.....
}
The dll is only getting the bodies of the functions, so when I compile, I get lots of unresolved external symbols (I'm quite sure that this is the issue, because I tested with another class fully built in a .h file, in another project, and no errors). So how can I solve this mystery?
It is normal for the import headers to only have function signatures; the actual function bodies are already compiled into the DLL binary and are resolved at link time by linking into the actual DLL.
The first thing to try is to make sure you are actually linking to the said DLL. It isn't enough to just include the header, you also need to link to the binary. So in your project configuration, you need to add a link to (for example) the .lib file that gets created along-side the DLL when the DLL is compiled (if in MSVC). This lib file lets the linker know how to connect the function signatures you included via the import header to the actual implementations contained in the DLL. If you're on a different platform, the mechanics might be a little different, but the concepts will be similar.
Edits:
The next step is to make sure the binary is actually exporting the symbols you're trying to link against. Make sure that all interface signatures are being exported via __declspec(dll_export) prefixes. Normally this is wrapped up in an IFDEF so that the header is declared export while the DLL is being compiled, but not when that header is included in a client project. Next, you could use dumpbin to check the mangled export names, and see if there is anything unexpected.
Here's a modified version of your example that illustrates this style of export (note, I haven't tested if this compiles, apologies for any typos):
#ifdef BUILDING_MYDLL
#define MYDLL_API __declspec(dllexport)
#else
#define MYDLL_API __declspec(dllimport)
#endif
class MYDLL_API x
{
void myFunc();
}
You would then set your configuration to define BUILDING_MYDLL when compiling the dll, but not when compiling the executable. This way the functions are only marked export when compiling the library dll. Now you can mark your public API functions with MYDLL_API and they should get exported during build.
Please note that dll_export, dll_import, and declspec are all very MSVC-specific constructs. Other compilers/runtimes handle symbol export in different ways.
There's multiple ways to link DLL into your app on Windows, check out this existing question/answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/2060508/1701823

How to block a function from being exported in MS VS C++?

So for the sake of the argument, I have a module called ExportedFunctions.cpp whith a couple of functions decorated with the DLL_EXPORT (see below)
#define DLL_EXPORT __declspec(dllexport)
ExportedFuncitons.cpp includes a LibraryFunctions.h. The functions declared in that header are implemented in LibraryFunctions.lib and statically linked to my project.
The problem is that when I compile my DLL and look at it using a dependency walker (depends.exe), I can see not only the functions exported by ExportedFunctions.cpp, but also all of the functions in LibraryFunctions.h.
That is the case even if I delete some function declarations from LibraryFunctions.h. They keep showing as DLL entry points. I want to hide them.
Figured it out.
The problem is that the lib file is exporting the functions. It looks like it exports regardless of what the .h file is saying.
Luckily I'm also the owner of LibraryFunctions, so I recompiled it using "Release - Static Lib". In that configuration I block the dllexport directive.

why do I need to link a lib file to my project?

I am creating a project that uses a DLL. To build my project, I need to include a header file, and a lib file. Why do I need to include the respective lib file? shouldn't the header file declare all the needed information and then at runtime load any needed library/dll?
Thanks
In many other languages, the equivalent of the header file is all you need. But the common C linkers on Windows have always used import libraries, C++ linkers followed suit, and it's probably too late to change.
As a thought experiment, one could imagine syntax like this:
__declspec(dllimport, "kernel32") void __stdcall Sleep(DWORD dwMilliseconds);
Armed with that information the compiler/linker tool chain could do the rest.
As a further example, in Delphi one would import this function, using implicit linking, like so:
procedure Sleep(dwMilliseconds: DWORD); stdcall; external 'kernel32';
which just goes to show that import libraries are not, a priori, essential for linking to DLLs.
That is a so-called "import library" that contains minimal wiring that will later (at load time) ask the operating system to load the DLL.
DLLs are a Windows (MS/Intel) thing. The (generated) lib contains the code needed to call into the DLL and it exposes 'normal' functions to the rest of your App.
No, the header file isn't necassarily enough. The header file can contain just the declarations of the functions and classes and other things you need, not their implementations.
There is a world of difference between this code:
void Multiply(int x, int y);
and this code:
void Multiply(int x, int y)
{
return x * y;
}
The first is a declaration, and the second is a definition or implementation. Usually the first example is put in header files, and the second one is put in .CPP files (If you are creating libraries). If you included a header with the first and didn't link in anything, how is your application supposed to know how to implement Multiply?
Now if you are using header files that contain code that is ALL inlined, then you do not need to link anything. But if even one method is NOT inlined, but has its implementation in a .CPP file that is compiled to a .lib file, than you need to link in the .lib file.
[EDIT]
With your use of Import Libraries, you are telling the linker to NOT include the implementation details of the imported code into your binary. Instead the OS will then load the import DLL at run-time into your process. This will make your application smaller, but you have to ship another DLL with it. If the implementation of the library changes, you can just reship another DLL to your customers, and not have to reship the entire application.
There is another option where you can just link in a library and you don't need to ship another DLL. That option is where the Linker will include the implementation into your application, making it bigger in size. If you have to change the implementation details in the imported library, then you have to recompile and relink your entire application, and reship the entire thing to your customers.
There are two relevant phases in the building process here:
compilation: from the source code to an object file. During the compilation, the compiler needs to know what external things are available, for that one needs a declaration. Declarations designed to be used in several compilation units are grouped in header. So you need the headers for the library.
linking: For static libraries, you need the compiled version of the library. For dynamic libraries, in Unix you need the library, in windows, you need the "import library".
You could think that a library could also embed the declarations or the header could include the library which needs to be linked. The first is often done in other languages. The second is sometimes available through pragmas in C and C++, but there is no standard way to do this and would be in conflict with common usage (such as choosing a library among several which provide code variant for the same declarations, for instance debug/release single thread/multithreads). And neither choice correspond well with the simple compilation model of C and C++ which has its roots in the 60's.
The header file is consumed by the compiler. It contains all the forward declarations of functions, classes and global variables that will be used. It may also contain some inline function definitions as well.
These are used by the compiler to give it the bare minimum information that it needs to compile your code. It will not contain the implementation details.
However you still need to link in all the function, and variable definitions that you have told the compiler about. Failure to do so will result in a linker error. Often this is contains in other object files which may be joined into a single static library.
In the case of DLLs (or .so files), we still need to tell the linker where in the DLL or shared object the missing symbols are. On windows, this information is contained in a .lib file. This will generate the code to load and link the code at runtime.
On unix the the dll and lib files are combined into a single .so file which you must link against to about linker errors.
You can still use a dll without a .lib file but you will then have to load and link in all the symbols manually using operating system APIs.
from 1000 ft, the lib contains the list of the functions that dll exports and addresses that are needed for the call.