C++ | Linkage specifications
A linkage specification tells the compiler to compile declarations in a way that allows them to be linked together with declarations written in another language, such as C.
Signal handler for Unix-like operating system
Section titled “Signal handler for Unix-like operating system”Since a signal handler will be called by the kernel using the C calling convention, we must tell the compiler to use the C calling convention when compiling the function.
volatile sig_atomic_t death_signal = 0;extern "C" void cleanup(int signum) { death_signal = signum;}int main() { bind(...); listen(...); signal(SIGTERM, cleanup); while (int fd = accept(...)) { if (fd == -1 && errno == EINTR && death_signal) { printf("Caught signal %d; shutting down\n", death_signal); break; } // ... }}Making a C library header compatible with C++
Section titled “Making a C library header compatible with C++”A C library header can usually be included into a C++ program, since most declarations are valid in both C and C++. For example, consider the following foo.h:
typedef struct Foo { int bar;} Foo;Foo make_foo(int);The definition of make_foo is separately compiled and distributed with the header in object form.
A C++ program can #include <foo.h>, but the compiler will not know that the make_foo function is defined as a C symbol, and will probably try to look for it with a mangled name, and fail to locate it. Even if it can find the definition of make_foo in the library, not all platforms use the same calling conventions for C and C++, and the C++ compiler will use the C++ calling convention when calling make_foo, which is likely to cause a segmentation fault if make_foo is expecting to be called with the C calling convention.
The way to remedy this problem is to wrap almost all the declarations in the header in an extern "C" block.
#ifdef __cplusplusextern "C" {#endif
typedef struct Foo { int bar;} Foo;Foo make_foo(int);
#ifdef __cplusplus} /* end of "extern C" block */#endifNow when foo.h is included from a C program, it will just appear as ordinary declarations, but when foo.h is included from a C++ program, make_foo will be inside an extern "C" block and the compiler will know to look for an unmangled name and use the C calling convention.
Syntax
Section titled “Syntax”- extern string-literal { declaration-seq(opt) }
- extern string-literal declaration
Remarks
Section titled “Remarks”The standard requires all compilers to support extern "C" in order to allow C++ to be compatible with C, and extern "C++", which may be used to override an enclosing linkage specification and restore the default. Other supported linkage specifications are implementation-defined.