I am using cgo
in a project, and I want to export a function for use. Here's an example of what I want to achieve:
package csplit
import (
"C"
"strings"
)
//export Split
/* The Split function takes two C strings, the second of which represents
a substring to split on, and returns an array of strings. Example:
Split("1,2", ",") // gives ["1", "2"]
*/
func Split(original *C.char, split *C.char) []*C.char {
goResult := strings.Split(C.GoString(original), C.GoString(split))
cResult := make([]*C.char, len(goResult))
for idx, substring := range goResult {
cResult[idx] = C.CString(substring)
}
return cResult
}
The problem is that the return type is Go allocated data, and not moved into the C heap. This panics with: runtime error: cgo result has Go pointer
You're returning a Go slice which is allocated in Go, and is a different structure than a C array. You need to allocate an array in C:
//export Split
func Split(original *C.char, split *C.char) **C.char {
goResult := strings.Split(C.GoString(original), C.GoString(split))
cArray := C.malloc(C.size_t(len(goResult)) * C.size_t(unsafe.Sizeof(uintptr(0))))
// convert the C array to a Go Array so we can index it
a := unsafe.Slice((**C.char)(cArray), len(goResult))
for idx, substring := range goResult {
a[idx] = C.CString(substring)
}
return (**C.char)(cArray)
}