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Last update Jul 16, 2004

D Application Binary Interface

A D implementation that conforms to the D ABI (Application Binary Interface) will be able to generate libraries, DLL's, etc., that can interoperate with D binaries built by other implementations.

Most of this specification remains TBD (To Be Defined).

C ABI

The C ABI referred to in this specification means the C Application Binary Interface of the target system. C and D code should be freely linkable together, in particular, D code shall have access to the entire C ABI runtime library.

Basic Types

TBD

Structs

Conforms to the target's C ABI struct layout.

Classes

An object consists of:
	offset	contents
	------  --------
	0:	pointer to vtable
	4:	monitor
	8...	non-static members
	
The vtable consists of:
	0:	pointer to instance of ClassInfo
	4...	pointers to virtual member functions
	
The class definition:
	class XXXX
	{
	    ....
	};
	
Generates the following:

Interfaces

TBD

Arrays

A dynamic array consists of:
	0:	array dimension
	4:	pointer to array data
	
A dynamic array is declared as:
	type array[];
	
whereas a static array is declared as:
	type array[dimension];
	
Thus, a static array always has the dimension statically available as part of the type, and so it is implemented like in C. Static array's and Dynamic arrays can be easily converted back and forth to each other.

Associative Arrays

TBD

Reference Types

D has reference types, but they are implicit. For example, classes are always referred to by reference; this means that class instances can never reside on the stack or be passed as function parameters.

When passing a static array to a function, the result, although declared as a static array, will actually be a reference to a static array. For example:

	int abc[3];
	
Passing abc to functions results in these implicit conversions:
	void func(int array[3]);	// actually 
	void func(int *p);		// abc[3] is converted to a pointer to the first element
	void func(int array[]);	// abc[3] is converted to a dynamic array
	

Name Mangling

TBD

Function Calling Conventions

TBD

Exception Handling

Windows

Conforms to the Microsoft Windows Structured Exception Handling conventions. TBD

Linux

Uses static address range/handler tables. TBD

Garbage Collection

TBD

Runtime Helper Functions

TBD

Module Initialization and Termination

TBD

Unit Testing

TBD

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