gmp-mpfr-sys

Crates.iogmp-mpfr-sys
lib.rsgmp-mpfr-sys
version1.6.4
sourcesrc
created_at2017-01-03 22:25:26.307265
updated_at2024-06-05 19:27:30.146949
descriptionRust FFI bindings for GMP, MPFR and MPC.
homepage
repositoryhttps://gitlab.com/tspiteri/gmp-mpfr-sys
max_upload_size
id7907
size28,070,262
Trevor Spiteri (tspiteri)

documentation

https://docs.rs/gmp-mpfr-sys

README

Rust low-level bindings for GMP, MPFR and MPC

The gmp-mpfr-sys crate provides Rust FFI bindings to the following GNU arbitrary-precision libraries:

  • GMP for integers and rational numbers,
  • MPFR for floating-point numbers, and
  • MPC for complex numbers.

The source of the three libraries is included in the package.

The gmp-mpfr-sys crate is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the full text of the GNU LGPL and GNU GPL for details.

What’s new

Version 1.6.4 news (2024-06-05)

  • The license headers in the documentation for the GNU libraries were being inadvertently removed from the html files (issue 34).

Version 1.6.3 news (2024-05-30)

Version 1.6.2 news (2024-01-20)

  • Bug fix: when using system libs, the build would fail for some cases (issue 32).

Version 1.6.1 news (2023-08-23)

  • MPFR was updated from version 4.2.0-p12 to 4.2.1.

Version 1.6.0 news (2023-07-30)

  • GMP was updated from version 6.2.1 to 6.3.0.
  • MPFR was updated from version 4.2.0-p9 to 4.2.0-p12.

Other releases

Details on other releases can be found in RELEASES.md.

Basic features

This crate contains three modules:

  • gmp provides external FFI bindings to GMP.
  • mpfr provides external FFI bindings to MPFR.
  • mpc provides external FFI bindings to MPC.

The versions provided by this crate release are GMP version 6.3.0, MPFR version 4.2.1, and MPC version 1.3.1.

If you want a high-level API, consider using Rug, a crate which provides integers and floating-point numbers with arbitrary precision and correct rounding:

  • Integer is a bignum integer with arbitrary precision.
  • Rational is a bignum rational number with arbitrary precision.
  • Float is a multi-precision floating-point number with correct rounding.
  • Complex is a multi-precision complex number with correct rounding.

Name prefixes

Since modules and enumerated types provide namespacing, most prefixes in the C names are removed. However, when the prefix is not a whole word it is not removed. For example mp_set_memory_functions becomes gmp::set_memory_functions, but mpz_init becomes gmp::mpz_init not gmp::z_init, and MPFR_RNDN in enum MPFR_RND_T becomes mpfr::rnd_t::RNDN not mpfr::rnd_t::N. Also, the types mpfr::mpfr_t and mpc::mpc_t are not shortened to mpfr::t or mpc::t.

Types

Unlike in the C libraries, the types gmp::mpz_t, gmp::mpq_t, gmp::mpf_t, gmp::randstate_t, mpfr::mpfr_t and mpc::mpc_t are defined directly as structs, not as single-element arrays.

Undocumented or obsolete functions

The bindings do not cover undocumented or obsolete functions and macros.

Using gmp-mpfr-sys

The gmp-mpfr-sys crate is available on crates.io. To use gmp-mpfr-sys in your crate, add it as a dependency inside Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
gmp-mpfr-sys = "1.6"

This crate required rustc version 1.65.0 or later.

If the C libraries have a major version bump with some deprecated functions removed, but no features are removed in the Rust bindings, then gmp-mpfr-sys will have a minor version bump rather than a major version bump. This allows more compatiblity across crates that use the Rust bindings but do not use the C libraries directly.

If on the other hand a dependent crate makes use of internal implementation details, or includes a C library that directly uses the header (.h) and library (.a) files built using C, it can be a good idea to depend on version "~1.6" instead of version "1.6" in order to ensure backwards compatibility at the C level as well.

Optional features

The gmp-mpfr-sys crate has two optional features:

  1. mpfr, enabled by default. Required to include the MPFR library.
  2. mpc, enabled by default. Required to include the MPC library. This feature requires the mpfr feature.

The GMP library is always included.

The two optional features are enabled by default; to use features selectively, you can add the dependency like this to Cargo.toml:

[dependencies.gmp-mpfr-sys]
version = "1.6"
default-features = false
features = ["mpfr"]

Here only the mpfr feature is selected.

Experimental optional features

It is not considered a breaking change if experimental features are removed. The removal of experimental features would however require a minor version bump.

Experimental features may also not work on all platforms.

There are three experimental feature:

  1. use-system-libs, disabled by default. Using this feature, the system libraries for GMP, and MPFR and MPC if enabled, will be used instead of building them from source. The major versions of the system libraries must be equal to those provided by the crate, and the minor versions of the system libraries must be greater or equal to those provided by the crate. There are no restriction on the patch version.
  2. force-cross, disabled by default. Without this feature, the build will fail if cross compilation is detected, because cross compilation is not tested or supported and can lead to silent failures that are hard to debug, especially if this crate is an indirect dependency. As an exception, cross compiling from x86_64 to i686 does not need this feature. (Compiling on MinGW does not have this exception because MinGW does not support cross compilation from 64-bit to 32-bit.)
  3. c-no-tests, disabled by default. Using this feature will skip testing the C libraries. This is not advised; the risk that the GMP sources are miscompiled is unfortunately quite high. And if they indeed are miscompiled, the tests are very likely to trigger the compiler-introduced bug.

Metadata

The gmp-mpfr-sys crate passes some metadata to its dependents:

  1. DEP_GMP_LIMB_BITS contains the number of bits per limb, which is 32 or 64.
  2. DEP_GMP_OUT_DIR contains the path of a directory that contains two subdirectories: the first subdirectory is named lib and contains the generated library (.a) files, and the second subdirectory is named include and contains the corresponding header (.h) files.
  3. DEP_GMP_LIB_DIR contains the path of the lib subdirectory of the DEP_GMP_OUT_DIR directory.
  4. DEP_GMP_INCLUDE_DIR contains the path of the include subdirectory of the DEP_GMP_OUT_DIR directory.

A dependent crate can use these environment variables in its build script.

Building on GNU/Linux

Warning: The build system does not support building in paths that contain spaces.

To build on GNU/Linux, simply make sure you have diffutils, gcc, m4 and make installed on your system. For example on Fedora:

sudo dnf install diffutils gcc m4 make

Note that you can use Clang instead of GCC by installing clang and setting the environment variable CC=clang before building the crate.

Building on macOS

Warning: The build system does not support building in paths that contain spaces.

To build on macOS, you need the command-line developer tools. To install them, run the following command in a terminal:

xcode-select --install

Building on Windows

Warning: The build system does not support building in paths that contain spaces.

You can build on Windows with the Rust GNU toolchain and an up-to-date MSYS2 installation. Some steps for a 64-bit environment are listed below. (32-bit: Changes for a 32-bit environment are written in brackets like this comment.)

To install MSYS2:

  1. Install MSYS2 using the installer.

  2. Launch the MSYS2 MinGW 64-bit terminal from the start menu. (32-bit: Launch the MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit terminal instead.)

  3. Install the required tools.

    pacman -S pacman-mirrors
    pacman -S diffutils m4 make mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc
    

    (32-bit: Install mingw-w64-i686-gcc instead of mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc.)

Then, to build a crate with a dependency on this crate:

  1. Launch the MSYS2 MinGW 64-bit terminal from the start menu. (32-bit: Launch the MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit terminal instead.)

  2. Change to the crate directory.

  3. Build the crate using cargo.

Note that you can use Clang instead of GCC by installing mingw-w64-x86_64-clang (32-bit: mingw-w64-i686-clang) and setting the environment variable CC=clang before building the crate.

Cross compilation

While some cross compilation is possible, it is not tested automatically, and may not work. Merge requests that improve cross compilation are accepted.

The experimental feature force-cross must be enabled for cross compilation. There is one case which is allowed even without the feature: when the only difference between host and target is that the host is x86_64 and the target is i686.

Caching the built C libraries

Building the C libraries can take some time. In order to save compilation time, the built libraries are cached in the user’s cache directory as follows:

  • on GNU/Linux: inside $XDG_CACHE_HOME/gmp-mpfr-sys or $HOME/.cache/gmp-mpfr-sys
  • on macOS: inside $HOME/Library/Caches/gmp-mpfr-sys
  • on Windows: inside {FOLDERID_LocalAppData}\gmp-mpfr-sys

To use a different directory, you can set the environment variable GMP_MPFR_SYS_CACHE to the desired cache directory. Setting the GMP_MPFR_SYS_CACHE variable to an empty string or to a single underscore ("_") will disable caching.

Commit count: 623

cargo fmt