Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Name mangling

Name mangling is the encoding of function and variable names into unique names so that linkers can separate common names in the language. Type names may also be mangled. The compiler generates function names with an encoding of the types of the function arguments when the module is compiled. Name mangling is commonly used to facilitate the overloading feature and visibility within different scopes. Name mangling also applies to variable names. If a variable is in a namespace, the name of the namespace is mangled into the variable name so that the same variable name can exist in more than one namespace. The C++ compiler also mangles C variable names to identify the namespace in which the C variable resides.

The scheme for producing a mangled name differs with the object model used to compile the source code: the mangled name of an object of a class compiled using one object model will be different from that of an object of the same class compiled using a different object model. The object model is controlled by compiler option or by pragma.

Name mangling is not desirable when linking C modules with libraries or object files compiled with a C++ compiler. To prevent the C++ compiler from mangling the name of a function, you can apply the extern "C" linkage specifier to the declaration or declarations, as shown in the following example:

extern "C" {
int f1(int);
int f2(int);
int f3(int);
};

This declaration tells the compiler that references to the functions f1, f2, and f3 should not be mangled.

The extern "C" linkage specifier can also be used to prevent mangling of functions that are defined in C++ so that they can be called from C. For example,

extern "C" {
void p(int){
/* not mangled */
}
};

name mangling is used in storing information about classes,templates,namespaces and operator overloading.
this means that object code produced by different compilers is not usually linkable.

Look more about name mangling :

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_mangling

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