@Vorpal@onlinepersona the way this is typically done is to expose an extern “C” interface in rust which provides a wrapper around the ABI-unstable rust interface. The C ABI for a given system is stable.
Note that C++ also doesn’t have a stable ABI either. The same patterns are used there.
Let me know if you want me to go into more detail on any of that. I’ve dealt with Rust and C++ FFIs for the last few years.
@Vorpal @onlinepersona the way this is typically done is to expose an extern “C” interface in rust which provides a wrapper around the ABI-unstable rust interface. The C ABI for a given system is stable.
Note that C++ also doesn’t have a stable ABI either. The same patterns are used there.
Let me know if you want me to go into more detail on any of that. I’ve dealt with Rust and C++ FFIs for the last few years.