I just started experimenting with Erlang NIFS and got stuck with this problem and I wonder if there's anything one can do about this.
Here is the NIF:
#include "erl_nif.h"
static ERL_NIF_TERM test_nif(ErlNifEnv* env, int argc, const ERL_NIF_TERM argv[])
{
ErlNifBinary binary;
if (!enif_inspect_iolist_as_binary(env, argv[0], &binary)) {
return enif_make_badarg(env);
}
printf("%s\n", binary.data);
return enif_make_int(env, 0);
}
static ErlNifFunc nif_funcs[] = {
{"test", 1, test_nif}
};
ERL_NIF_INIT(nif_test, nif_funcs, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL)
and some outputs when I call the function from erlang:
nif_test:test(<<"helló">>). % hell?
nif_test:test(<<"áéíóöőüű">>). % ?????Q?q
nif_test:test("hello"). % helloErlU?
nif_test:test(""). % xc?
nif_test:test("out"). % outg", "U?
It would be nice to get at least binary strings to work properly. Any ideas?
Edit:
I forgot that what I actually need is the data as string (char *
) in the C program, so I might have started this off all wrong.
The first two are because printf
is not honouring whatever character encoding you're using in your Erlang source file (probably UTF-8).
The rest are because ErlNifBinary
is not null-terminated. You also need to pay attention to binary.size
. Something like this:
printf("%.*s", binary.size, binary.data);