This enshrines the current testsuite practice of using ffi_arg for returned values. It would be reasonable and logical to use the actual return argument type as passed to ffi_prep_cif, but this would mean changing a large number of tests that use ffi_arg and all backends that write results to an ffi_arg.
* doc/libffi.texi: Correct example code. diff -urp gcc1/libffi/doc/libffi.texi gcc3/libffi/doc/libffi.texi --- gcc1/libffi/doc/libffi.texi 2013-06-13 21:03:53.000000000 +0930 +++ gcc3/libffi/doc/libffi.texi 2013-11-15 23:16:06.811643952 +1030 @@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ int main() ffi_type *args[1]; void *values[1]; char *s; - int rc; + ffi_arg rc; /* Initialize the argument info vectors */ args[0] = &ffi_type_pointer; @@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ int main() /* Initialize the cif */ if (ffi_prep_cif(&cif, FFI_DEFAULT_ABI, 1, - &ffi_type_uint, args) == FFI_OK) + &ffi_type_sint, args) == FFI_OK) @{ s = "Hello World!"; ffi_call(&cif, puts, &rc, values); @@ -414,6 +414,7 @@ Here is the corresponding code to descri int i; tm_type.size = tm_type.alignment = 0; + tm_type.type = FFI_TYPE_STRUCT; tm_type.elements = &tm_type_elements; for (i = 0; i < 9; i++) @@ -540,7 +541,7 @@ A trivial example that creates a new @co #include <ffi.h> /* Acts like puts with the file given at time of enclosure. */ -void puts_binding(ffi_cif *cif, unsigned int *ret, void* args[], +void puts_binding(ffi_cif *cif, ffi_arg *ret, void* args[], FILE *stream) @{ *ret = fputs(*(char **)args[0], stream); @@ -565,7 +566,7 @@ int main() /* Initialize the cif */ if (ffi_prep_cif(&cif, FFI_DEFAULT_ABI, 1, - &ffi_type_uint, args) == FFI_OK) + &ffi_type_sint, args) == FFI_OK) @{ /* Initialize the closure, setting stream to stdout */ if (ffi_prep_closure_loc(closure, &cif, puts_binding, -- Alan Modra Australia Development Lab, IBM