Embedding Mono
The Mono runtime can be embedded into C and C++
applications. Your C/C++ code can invoke managed code
running in the Mono/.NET world and you can also surface your
internal application APIs to Mono and .NET.
For an overview of how to embed Mono into your application
and the strategies that you can use to embed Mono, check the
Mono
website's
Embedding
Mono page.
This page is the companion API reference for the above guide.
The simplest way of embedding Mono is illustrated here:
int main (int argc, char *argv)
{
/*
* Load the default Mono configuration file, this is needed
* if you are planning on using the dllmaps defined on the
* system configuration
*/
mono_config_parse (NULL);
/*
* mono_jit_init() creates a domain: each assembly is
* loaded and run in a MonoDomain.
*/
MonoDomain *domain = mono_jit_init ("startup.exe");
/*
* Optionally, add an internal call that your startup.exe
* code can call, this will bridge startup.exe to Mono
*/
mono_add_internal_call ("Sample::GetMessage", getMessage);
/*
* Open the executable, and run the Main method declared
* in the executable
*/
MonoAssembly *assembly = mono_domain_assembly_open (domain, "startup.exe");
if (!assembly)
exit (2);
/*
* mono_jit_exec() will run the Main() method in the assembly.
* The return value needs to be looked up from
* System.Environment.ExitCode.
*/
mono_jit_exec (domain, assembly, argc, argv);
}
/* The C# signature for this method is: string GetMessage () in class Sample */
MonoString*
getMessage ()
{
return mono_string_new (mono_domain_get (), "Hello, world");
}
mono_jit_init
Syntax
MonoDomain*
mono_jit_init (const char *file)
mono_jit_parse_options
Syntax
void
mono_jit_parse_options (int argc, char * argv[])
Description
Process the command line options in
argv as done by the runtime executable.
This should be called before
mono_jit_init
.
mono_jit_exec
Syntax
int
mono_jit_exec (MonoDomain *domain, MonoAssembly *assembly, int argc, char *argv[])
Parameters
assembly | reference to an assembly |
argc | argument count |
argv | argument vector |
Description
Start execution of a program.
mono_set_dirs
Syntax
void
mono_set_dirs (const char *assembly_dir, const char *config_dir)
Parameters
assembly_dir | the base directory for assemblies |
config_dir | the base directory for configuration files |
Description
This routine is used internally and by developers embedding
the runtime into their own applications.
There are a number of cases to consider: Mono as a system-installed
package that is available on the location preconfigured or Mono in
a relocated location.
If you are using a system-installed Mono, you can pass
NULL
to both parameters. If you are not, you should compute both
directory values and call this routine.
The values for a given PREFIX are:
assembly_dir: PREFIX/lib
config_dir: PREFIX/etc
Notice that embedders that use Mono in a relocated way must
compute the location at runtime, as they will be in control
of where Mono is installed.
mono_parse_default_optimizations
Syntax
int
mono_parse_default_optimizations (const char* p)
mono_runtime_set_main_args
Syntax
int
mono_runtime_set_main_args (int argc, char* argv[])
Parameters
argc | number of arguments from the command line |
argv | array of strings from the command line |
Description
Set the command line arguments from an embedding application that doesn't otherwise call
mono_runtime_run_main
.
mono_jit_cleanup
Syntax
void
mono_jit_cleanup (MonoDomain *domain)
mono_jit_set_trace_options
Syntax
gboolean
mono_jit_set_trace_options (const char* options)
Parameters
options | string representing the trace options |
Return value
TRUE
if the options were parsed and set correctly, FALSE
otherwise.
Description
Set the options of the tracing engine. This function can be called before initializing
the mono runtime. See the --trace mono(1) manpage for the options format.
Internal Calls
The Mono runtime provides two mechanisms to expose C code
to the CIL universe: internal calls and native C
code. Internal calls are tightly integrated with the runtime,
and have the least overhead, as they use the same data types
that the runtime uses.
The other option is to use the Platform Invoke (P/Invoke)
to call C code from the CIL universe, using the standard
P/Invoke
mechanisms.
To register an internal call, use this call you use the
mono_add_internal_call
routine.
mono_add_internal_call
Syntax
void
mono_add_internal_call (const char *name, gconstpointer method)
Parameters
name | method specification to surface to the managed world |
method | pointer to a C method to invoke when the method is called |
Description
This method surfaces the C function pointed by
method as a method
that has been surfaced in managed code with the method specified in
name as an internal call.
Internal calls are surfaced to all app domains loaded and they are
accessibly by a type with the specified name.
You must provide a fully qualified type name, that is namespaces
and type name, followed by a colon and the method name, with an
optional signature to bind.
For example, the following are all valid declarations:
MyApp.Services.ScriptService:Accelerate
MyApp.Services.ScriptService:Slowdown(int,bool)
You use method parameters in cases where there might be more than
one surface method to managed code. That way you can register different
internal calls for different method overloads.
The internal calls are invoked with no marshalling. This means that .NET
types like
System.String
are exposed as
MonoString*
parameters. This is
different than the way that strings are surfaced in P/Invoke.
For more information on how the parameters are marshalled, see the
Mono Embedding
page.
See the
Method Description
reference for more information on the format of method descriptions.
P/Invoke with embedded applications
Unlike internal calls, Platform/Invoke is easier to use and
more portable. It allows you to share code with Windows and
.NET that have a different setup for internal calls to their
own runtime.
Usually P/Invoke declarations reference external libraries
like:
[DllImport ("opengl")]
void glBegin (GLEnum mode)
Mono extends P/Invoke to support looking up symbols not in
an external library, but looking up those symbols into the
same address space as your program, to do this, use the
special library name "__Internal". This will direct Mono to
lookup the method in your own process.
There are situations where the host operating system does
not support looking up symbols on the process address space.
For situations like this you can use
the
mono_dl_register_library.
Data Marshalling
Managed objects are represented as
MonoObject*
types. Those objects that the runtime consumes directly have
more specific C definitions (for example strings are of type
MonoString *, delegates are of type
MonoDelegate* but they are still
MonoObject
*s).
As of Mono 1.2.x types defined in mscorlib.dll do not have
their fields reordered in any way. But other libraries might
have their fields reordered. In these cases, Managed
structures and objects have the same layout in the C# code as
they do in the unmanaged world.
Structures defined outside corlib must have a specific
StructLayout definition, and have it set as sequential if you
plan on accessing these fields directly from C code.
Important Internal calls do not provide support for
marshalling structures. This means that any API calls that
take a structure (excluding the system types like int32,
int64, etc) must be passed as a pointer, in C# this means
passing the value as a "ref" or "out" parameter.
Mono Runtime Configuration
Certain features of the Mono runtime, like DLL mapping, are
available through a configuration file that is loaded at
runtime. The default Mono implementation loads the
configuration file from
$sysconfig/mono/config
(typically this is
/etc/mono/config).
See the
mono-config(5) man page for more details
on what goes in this file.
The following APIs expose this functionality:
mono_config_cleanup
Syntax
void
mono_config_cleanup (void)
mono_config_is_server_mode
Syntax
mono_bool
mono_config_is_server_mode (void)
mono_config_parse
Syntax
void
mono_config_parse (const char *filename)
Parameters
filename | the filename to load the configuration variables from. |
Description
Pass a NULL
filename to parse the default config files
(or the file in the MONO_CONFIG
env var).
mono_config_parse_memory
Syntax
void
mono_config_parse_memory (const char *buffer)
Parameters
buffer | a pointer to an string XML representation of the configuration |
Description
Parses the configuration from a buffer
mono_config_set_server_mode
Syntax
void
mono_config_set_server_mode (mono_bool server_mode)
mono_config_string_for_assembly_file
Syntax
const char *
mono_config_string_for_assembly_file (const char *filename)
mono_get_config_dir
Syntax
const char*
mono_get_config_dir (void)
mono_get_machine_config
Syntax
const char *
mono_get_machine_config (void)
mono_register_machine_config
Syntax
void
mono_register_machine_config (const char *config_xml)
mono_set_config_dir
Syntax
void
mono_set_config_dir (const char *dir)
Description
Invoked during startup
Advanced Execution Setups
These are not recommended ways of initializing Mono, they
are done internally by mono_jit_init, but are here to explain
what happens internally.
mono_runtime_exec_managed_code
Syntax
void
mono_runtime_exec_managed_code (MonoDomain *domain,
MonoMainThreadFunc mfunc,
gpointer margs)
Parameters
domain | Application domain |
main_func | function to invoke from the execution thread |
main_args | parameter to the main_func |
Description
Launch a new thread to execute a function
main_func is called back from the thread with main_args as the
parameter. The callback function is expected to start
Main
eventually. This function then waits for all managed threads to
finish.
It is not necessary anymore to execute managed code in a subthread,
so this function should not be used anymore by default: just
execute the code and then call mono_thread_manage().
mono_runtime_exec_main
Syntax
mono_runtime_exec_main
mono_init
Syntax
MonoDomain*
mono_init (const char *domain_name)
Return value
the initial domain.
Description
Creates the initial application domain and initializes the mono_defaults
structure.
This function is guaranteed to not run any IL code.
The runtime is initialized using the default runtime version.
mono_init_from_assembly
Syntax
MonoDomain*
mono_init_from_assembly (const char *domain_name, const char *filename)
Parameters
domain_name | name to give to the initial domain |
filename | filename to load on startup |
Return value
the initial domain.
Description
Used by the runtime, users should use mono_jit_init instead.
Creates the initial application domain and initializes the mono_defaults
structure.
This function is guaranteed to not run any IL code.
The runtime is initialized using the runtime version required by the
provided executable. The version is determined by looking at the exe
configuration file and the version PE field)
mono_init_version
Syntax
MonoDomain*
mono_init_version (const char *domain_name, const char *version)
Return value
the initial domain.
Description
Used by the runtime, users should use
mono_jit_init
instead.
Creates the initial application domain and initializes the
mono_defaults
structure.
This function is guaranteed to not run any IL code.
The runtime is initialized using the provided rutime version.
mono_jit_exec
Syntax
int
mono_jit_exec (MonoDomain *domain, MonoAssembly *assembly, int argc, char *argv[])
Parameters
assembly | reference to an assembly |
argc | argument count |
argv | argument vector |
Description
Start execution of a program.
mono_jit_set_aot_mode
Syntax
void
mono_jit_set_aot_mode (MonoAotMode mode)
mono_set_break_policy
Syntax
void
mono_set_break_policy (MonoBreakPolicyFunc policy_callback)
Parameters
policy_callback | the new callback function |
Description
Allow embedders to decide whether to actually obey breakpoint instructions
(both break IL instructions and
Debugger.Break
method calls), for example
to not allow an app to be aborted by a perfectly valid IL opcode when executing
untrusted or semi-trusted code.
policy_callback will be called every time a break point instruction needs to
be inserted with the method argument being the method that calls
Debugger.Break
or has the IL
break
instruction. The callback should return
MONO_BREAK_POLICY_NEVER
if it wants the breakpoint to not be effective in the given method.
MONO_BREAK_POLICY_ALWAYS
is the default.
mono_get_runtime_build_info
Syntax
char*
mono_get_runtime_build_info (void)
Return value
the runtime version + build date in string format.
Description
The returned string is owned by the caller. The returned string
format is VERSION (FULL_VERSION BUILD_DATE)
and build date is optional.
Signal Chaining
mono_set_signal_chaining
Syntax
void
mono_set_signal_chaining (gboolean chain_signals)
Description
Enable/disable signal chaining. This should be called before
mono_jit_init
.
If signal chaining is enabled, the runtime saves the original signal handlers before
installing its own handlers, and calls the original ones in the following cases:
- a
SIGSEGV
/
SIGABRT
signal received while executing native (i.e. not JITted) code.
-
SIGPROF
-
SIGFPE
-
SIGQUIT
-
SIGUSR2
Signal chaining only works on POSIX platforms.