This feels like a noob question, so if it’s a dupe, please point me to the right location 🙂
I tried including a DLL written in C into a C++ program. It didn’t work; gcc said
test.cpp: xxx: error: too many arguments to function.
Here’s a minimal working example:
Wrapper for DLL functions:
/* myWrapper.h */
#ifndef _MYWRAPPER_H
#define _MYWRAPPER_H
#include <windows.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
extern FARPROC EXPORTED_functionNameP;
int GetDLLpointers();
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif
Implementation thereof:
/* myWrapper.c */
#include <windows.h>
#include "myHeader.h"
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
HINSTANCE drvsHANDLE;
extern FARPROC EXPORTED_functionNameP;
int GetDLLpointers()
{
static int result;
drvsHANDLE = LoadLibrary("myLibrary.dll");
if (drvsHANDLE == NULL) return (result=0);
EXPORTED_functionNameP = GetProcAddress(
drvsHANDLE, "originalFunctionName");
if (EXPORTED_functionNameP == NULL) return (result = 0);
return (result = 1);
}
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
Naturally, I haven’t written these nor the library myself, and preferably, they should all stay untouched. I did however add the extern "C" lines.
Then, my main file:
// my Main
#include <windows.h>
#include "myHeader.h"
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int arg = 1;
EXPORTED_functionNameP(arg);
return 0;
}
Build commands:
gcc -I. -c -o myHeader.o myHeader.c -L. -lmyLibrary
g++ -I. -o main.exe myMain.cpp myHeader.o -L. -lmyLibrary
It works fine if I rewrite my main.cpp into valid C and compile with gcc instead of g++.
I tried changing extern "C" into extern "C++" to no avail, I tried all permutations or gcc and g++ for the two build commands, nothing.
I know it’s something to do with name mangling, but I thought gcc would take care of that when you include the extern "C" lines…Can someone please explain what I’m missing here?
In case it matters —
Windows XP Pro (will be Win7 later on)
(MinGW) gcc 4.6.2
There is a difference between C and C++.
The MSDN page on CallWindowProc explains a bit more.