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Calling C++ functions from Java

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-23 13:08 出处:网络
I am developing a Java application 开发者_如何学Cin which I need to call some C++ functions (from Google Talk library libjingle) . The objective is to run it all on Google App Engine (which only suppo

I am developing a Java application 开发者_如何学Cin which I need to call some C++ functions (from Google Talk library libjingle) . The objective is to run it all on Google App Engine (which only supports Python or Java).

How can I do this?


You need to define native methods in your java code for whatever you want to be implemented in C++ and directly access your native code. Then you run javah on your code and it will generate the C header files for you and you'll need to provide C++ implementations.

The native methods you can call from your Java code like any other methods and still they'll have their implementation written in C++ and talking to whatever other native library directly.

You then need to set the java.library.path system property to include the shared C/C++ libraries that you require: the google library and your own JNI implementation library would be required in this case.


If the library has C bindings through a DLL/SO, I usually prefer writing wrappers in Java using Java Native Access (JNA) rather than writing the bindings in C/C++ using the Java Native Interface (JNI). The former is easier to manipulate as the JNI access to Java objects is a real pain in the neck. However, it's not as obvious to wrap C++ classes using that API.

You might also want to look into the Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator (SWIG) for automating part of this process!


You can't run native code on App Engine - only JRE code. If there's no avoiding the native code, you'll need to run this part of your app on another system, and call it from your App Engine app - or use the built-in XMPP API, in this case.

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