264 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
264 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
# librclone
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This directory contains code to build rclone as a C library and the
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shims for accessing rclone from C and other languages.
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**Note** for the moment, the interfaces defined here are experimental
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and may change in the future. Eventually they will stabilise and this
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notice will be removed.
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## C
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The shims are a thin wrapper over the rclone RPC.
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The implementation is based on cgo; to build it you need Go and a GCC compatible
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C compiler (GCC or Clang). On Windows you can use the MinGW port of GCC,
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e.g. by installing it in a [MSYS2](https://www.msys2.org) distribution
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(make sure you install GCC in the classic mingw64 subsystem, the ucrt64 version
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is not compatible with cgo).
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Build a shared library like this:
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go build --buildmode=c-shared -o librclone.so github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone
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Build a static library like this:
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go build --buildmode=c-archive -o librclone.a github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone
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Both the above commands will also generate `librclone.h` which should
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be `#include`d in `C` programs wishing to use the library (with some
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[exceptions](#include-file)).
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The library will depend on `libdl` and `libpthread` on Linux/macOS, unless
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linking with a C standard library where their functionality is integrated,
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which is the case for glibc version 2.34 and newer.
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You may add arguments `-ldflags -s` to make the library file smaller. This will
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omit symbol table and debug information, reducing size by about 25% on Linux and
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50% on Windows.
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Note that on macOS and Windows the mount functions will not be available unless
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you add additional argument `-tags cmount`. On Windows this also requires you to
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first install the third party utility [WinFsp](http://www.secfs.net/winfsp/),
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with the "Developer" feature selected, and to set environment variable CPATH
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pointing to the fuse include directory within the WinFsp installation
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(typically `C:\Program Files (x86)\WinFsp\inc\fuse`). See also the
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[mount](/commands/rclone_mount/#installing-on-windows) documentation.
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On Windows, when you build a shared library, you can embed version information
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as binary resource. To do that you need to run the following command **before**
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the build command.
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```
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go run bin/resource_windows.go -binary librclone.dll -dir librclone
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```
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### Documentation
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For documentation see the Go documentation for:
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- [RcloneInitialize](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone#RcloneInitialize)
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- [RcloneFinalize](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone#RcloneFinalize)
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- [RcloneRPC](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone#RcloneRPC)
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- [RcloneFreeString](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone#RcloneFreeString)
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### Linux C example
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There is an example program `ctest.c`, with `Makefile`, in the `ctest`
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subdirectory. It can be built on Linux/macOS, but not Windows without
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changes - as described next.
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### Windows C/C++ guidelines
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The official [C example](#linux-c-example) is targeting Linux/macOS, and will
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not work on Windows. It is very possible to use `librclone` from a C/C++
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application on Windows, but there are some pitfalls that you can avoid by
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following these guidelines:
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- Build `librclone` as shared library, and use run-time dynamic linking (see [linking](#linking)).
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- Do not try to unload the library with `FreeLibrary` (see [unloading](#unloading)).
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- Deallocate returned strings with API function `RcloneFreeString` (see [memory management](#memory-management)).
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- Define struct `RcloneRPCResult`, instead of including `librclone.h` (see [include file](#include-file)).
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- Use UTF-8 encoded strings (see [encoding](#encoding)).
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- Properly escape JSON strings, beware of the native path separator (see [escaping](#escaping)).
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#### Linking
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Use of different compilers, compiler versions, build configuration, and
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dependency on different C runtime libraries for a library and the application
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that references it, may easily break compatibility. When building the librclone
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library with MinGW GCC compiler (via go build command), if you link it into an
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application built with Visual C++ for example, there will be more than enough
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differences to cause problems.
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Linking with static library requires most compatibility, and is less likely to
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work. Linking with shared library is therefore recommended. The library exposes
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a plain C interface, and by using run-time dynamic linking (by using Windows API
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functions `LoadLibrary` and `GetProcAddress`), you can make a boundary that
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ensures compatibility (and in any case, you will not have an import library).
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The only remaining concern is then memory allocations; you should make sure
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memory is deallocated in the same library where it was allocated, as explained
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[below](#memory-management).
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#### Unloading
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Do not try to unload the library with `FreeLibrary`, when using run-time dynamic
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linking. The library includes Go-specific runtime components, with garbage
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collection and other background threads, which do not handle unloading. Trying
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to call `FreeLibrary` will crash the application. I.e. after you have loaded
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`librclone.dll` into your application it must stay loaded until your application
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exits.
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#### Memory management
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The output string returned from `RcloneRPC` is allocated within the `librclone`
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library, and caller is responsible for freeing the memory. Due to C runtime
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library differences, as mentioned [above](#linking), it is not recommended to do
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this by calling `free` from the consuming application. You should instead use
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the API function `RcloneFreeString`, which will call `free` from within the
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`librclone` library, using the same runtime that allocated it in the first
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place.
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#### Include file
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Do not include `librclone.h`. It contains some plain C, golang/cgo and GCC
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specific type definitions that will not compile with all other compilers
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without adjustments, where Visual C++ is one notable example. When using
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run-time dynamic linking, you have no use of the extern declared functions
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either.
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The interface of librclone is so simple, that all you need is to define the
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small struct `RcloneRPCResult`, from [librclone.go](librclone.go):
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```C++
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struct RcloneRPCResult {
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char* Output;
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int Status;
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};
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```
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#### Encoding
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The API uses plain C strings (type `char*`, called "narrow" strings), and rclone
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assumes content is UTF-8 encoded. On Linux systems this normally matches the
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standard string representation, and no special considerations must be made. On
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Windows it is more complex.
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On Windows, narrow strings are traditionally used with native non-Unicode
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encoding, the so-called ANSI code page, while Unicode strings are instead
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represented with the alternative `wchar_t*` type, called "wide" strings, and
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encoded as UTF-16. This means, to correctly handle characters that are encoded
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differently in UTF-8, you will need to perform conversion at some level:
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Conversion between UTF-8 encoded narrow strings used by rclone, and either ANSI
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encoded narrow strings or wide UTF-16 encoded strings used in runtime function,
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Windows API, third party APIs, etc.
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#### Escaping
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The RPC method takes a string containing JSON. In addition to the normal
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escaping of strings constants in your C/C++ source code, the JSON needs its
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own escaping. This is not a Windows-specific issue, but there is the
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additional challenge that native filesystem path separator is the same as
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the escape character, and you may end up with strings like this:
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```C++
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const char* input = "{"
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"\"fs\": \"C:\\\\Temp\","
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"\"remote\": \"sub/folder\","
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"\"opt\": \"{\\\"showHash\\\": true}\""
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"}";
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```
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With C++11 you can use raw string literals to avoid the C++ escaping of string
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constants, leaving escaping only necessary for the contained JSON.
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## Example in golang
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Here is a go example to help you move files :
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```go
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func main() {
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librclone.Initialize()
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syncRequest: = syncRequest {
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SrcFs: "<absolute_path>",
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DstFs: ":s3,env_auth=false,access_key_id=<access>,secret_access_key=<secret>,endpoint='<endpoint>':<bucket>",
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}
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syncRequestJSON, err: = json.Marshal(syncRequest)
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if err != nil {
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fmt.Println(err)
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}
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out, status: = librclone.RPC("sync/copy", string(syncRequestJSON))
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fmt.Println("Got status : %d and output %q", status, out)
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}
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```
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## gomobile
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The `gomobile` subdirectory contains the equivalent of the C binding but
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suitable for using with [gomobile](https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/mobile/cmd/gomobile)
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using something like this.
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gomobile bind -v -target=android -javapkg=org.rclone github.com/rclone/rclone/librclone/gomobile
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The command generates an Android library (`aar`) that can be imported
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into an Android application project. Librclone will be contained
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within `libgojni.so` and loaded automatically.
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```java
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// imports
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import org.rclone.gomobile.Gomobile;
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import org.rclone.gomobile.RcloneRPCResult;
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// initialize rclone
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Gomobile.rcloneInitialize();
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// call RC method and log response.
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RcloneRPCResult response = Gomobile.rcloneRPC("core/version", "{}");
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Log.i("rclone", "response status: " + response.getStatus());
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Log.i("rclone", "output: " + response.getOutput());
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// Clean up when finished.
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Gomobile.rcloneFinalize();
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```
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This is a low level interface - serialization, job management etc must
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be built on top of it.
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iOS has not been tested (but should probably work).
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Further docs:
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- [gomobile main website](https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/mobile/cmd/gomobile)
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- [gomobile wiki](https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Mobile)
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- [go issue #16876](https://github.com/golang/go/issues/16876) where the feature was added
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- [gomobile design doc](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1y9hStonl9wpj-5VM-xWrSTuEJFUAxGOXOhxvAs7GZHE/edit) for extra details not in the docs.
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## python
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The `python` subdirectory contains a simple Python wrapper for the C
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API using rclone linked as a shared library with `ctypes`.
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You are welcome to use this directly.
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This needs expanding and submitting to pypi...
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## Rust
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Rust bindings are available in the `librclone` crate: https://crates.io/crates/librclone
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## PHP
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The `php` subdirectory contains how to use the C library librclone in php through foreign
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function interface (FFI).
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Useful docs:
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- [PHP / FFI](https://www.php.net/manual/en/book.ffi.php)
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## TODO
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- Async jobs must currently be cancelled manually at the moment - RcloneFinalize doesn't do it.
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- This will use the rclone config system and rclone logging system.
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- Need examples showing how to configure things,
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