# UniFFI - a multi-language bindings generator for Rust UniFFI is a toolkit for building cross-platform software components in Rust. For the impatient, see [**the UniFFI user guide**](https://mozilla.github.io/uniffi-rs/) or [**the UniFFI examples**](https://github.com/mozilla/uniffi-rs/tree/main/examples#example-uniffi-components). By writing your core business logic in Rust and describing its interface in an "object model", you can use UniFFI to help you: * Compile your Rust code into a shared library for use on different target platforms. * Generate bindings to load and use the library from different target languages. You can describe your object model in an [interface definition file](https://mozilla.github.io/uniffi-rs/udl_file_spec.html) or [by using proc-macros](https://mozilla.github.io/uniffi-rs/proc_macro/index.html). UniFFI is currently used extensively by Mozilla in Firefox mobile and desktop browsers; written once in Rust, auto-generated bindings allow that functionality to be called from both Kotlin (for Android apps) and Swift (for iOS apps). It also has a growing community of users shipping various cool things to many users. UniFFI comes with support for **Kotlin**, **Swift**, **Python** and **Ruby** with 3rd party bindings available for **C#** and **Golang**. Additional foreign language bindings can be developed externally and we welcome contributions to list them here. See [Third-party foreign language bindings](#third-party-foreign-language-bindings). ## User Guide You can read more about using the tool in [**the UniFFI user guide**](https://mozilla.github.io/uniffi-rs/). We consider it ready for production use, but UniFFI is a long way from a 1.0 release with lots of internal work still going on. We try hard to avoid breaking simple consumers, but more advanced things might break as you upgrade over time. ### Etymology and Pronunciation ˈjuːnɪfaɪ. Pronounced to rhyme with "unify". A portmanteau word that also puns with "unify", to signify the joining of one codebase accessed from many languages. uni - [Latin ūni-, from ūnus, one] FFI - [Abbreviation, Foreign Function Interface] ## Alternative tools Other tools we know of which try and solve a similarly shaped problem are: * [Diplomat](https://github.com/rust-diplomat/diplomat/), which is focused more on C/C++ interop. * [Interoptopus](https://github.com/ralfbiedert/interoptopus/) (Please open a PR if you think other tools should be listed!) ## Third-party foreign language bindings * [Kotlin Multiplatform support](https://gitlab.com/trixnity/uniffi-kotlin-multiplatform-bindings). The repository contains Kotlin Multiplatform bindings generation for UniFFI, letting you target both JVM and Native. * [Go bindings](https://github.com/NordSecurity/uniffi-bindgen-go) * [C# bindings](https://github.com/NordSecurity/uniffi-bindgen-cs) * [Dart bindings](https://github.com/NiallBunting/uniffi-rs-dart) ### External resources There are a few third-party resources that make it easier to work with UniFFI: * [Plugin support for `.udl` files](https://github.com/Lonami/uniffi-dl) for the IDEA platform ([*uniffi-dl* in the JetBrains marketplace](https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/20527-uniffi-dl)). It provides syntax highlighting, code folding, code completion, reference resolution and navigation (among others features) for the [UniFFI Definition Language (UDL)](https://mozilla.github.io/uniffi-rs/). * [cargo swift](https://github.com/antoniusnaumann/cargo-swift), a cargo plugin to build a Swift Package from Rust code. It provides an init command for setting up a UniFFI crate and a package command for building a Swift package from Rust code - without the need for additional configuration or build scripts. * [Cargo NDK Gradle Plugin](https://github.com/willir/cargo-ndk-android-gradle) allows you to build Rust code using [`cargo-ndk`](https://github.com/bbqsrc/cargo-ndk), which generally makes Android library builds less painful. * [`uniffi-starter`](https://github.com/ianthetechie/uniffi-starter) is a minimal project demonstrates a wide range of UniFFI in a complete project in a compact manner. It includes a full Android library build process, an XCFramework generation script, and example Swift package structure. (Please open a PR if you think other resources should be listed!) ## Contributing If this tool sounds interesting to you, please help us develop it! You can: * View the [contributor guidelines](./docs/contributing.md). * File or work on [issues](https://github.com/mozilla/uniffi-rs/issues) here in GitHub. * Join discussions in the [#uniffi:mozilla.org](https://matrix.to/#/#uniffi:mozilla.org) room on Matrix. ## Code of Conduct This project is governed by Mozilla's [Community Participation Guidelines](./CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).