Is there such a thing as a generic function pointer in C that can be assigned/cast to a more restrictive prototype? Is there such a thing as a generic function pointer in C that can be assigned/cast to a more restrictive prototype? c c

Is there such a thing as a generic function pointer in C that can be assigned/cast to a more restrictive prototype?


The C standard guarantees that any object pointer type can be converted to void* and back again without loss of information (meaning that the re-converted pointer will compare equal to the original one).

There is a different guarantee for function pointers: Any function pointer can be converted to any other function pointer type and back again without loss of information.

(There is no guarantee regarding conversions between function pointers and object pointers, or more specifically between function pointers and void*. An implementation could, for example, make void* 64 bits and function pointers 128 bits.)

You can use, for example, void(*)(void) as a generic function pointer type:

typedef void (*funcptr)(void);

You must convert back to the original pointer type before executing a call to avoid undefined behavior.

On the other hand, you're using dlsym(), which returns a void*. My understanding is that POSIX guarantees that the void* returned by dlsym() (if the name argument names a function) can be converted to a function pointer, which can be used to call the function. If the only functions you care about are those whose addresses are returned by dlsym(), then you can use void*.

(POSIX previously guaranteed, as an extension to the C standard, that a function pointer can be converted to void* and back again. That guarantee was later dropped. Thanks to Jonathan Leffler for pointing this out.)

In any case, using function pointers to store the addresses of functions probably makes for clearer code.


You should probably define your list as void *functionList[2], since dlsym returns a void *. Once you know which function you have, you can cast it to the proper type.

void *functionList[2];...int (*functionA)(int) = (int(*)(int))functionList[0];char (*functionB)(char,int) = (char(*)(char, int))functionList[1];


dlsym returns a data pointer of type void *, but POSIX guarantees that this can be cast to a function pointer of the appropriate type:

Implementations supporting the XSI extension [...] require that an object of type void * can hold a pointer to a function. The result of converting a pointer to a function into a pointer to another data type (except void *) is still undefined, however.

Since Version 7 of POSIX, all implementations (not just XSI) are required to support the conversion.

Because conversion from a void * pointer to a function pointer via a direct cast can result in compiler warnings, older versions of POSIX recommend performing the conversion via aliasing:

int (*fptr)(int);*(void **)(&fptr) = dlsym(handle, "my_function");

In the current version the recommendation is changed to:

int (*fptr)(int);fptr = (int (*)(int))dlsym(handle, "my_function");