//@ run-pass #![allow(dead_code)] /*! * C-like enums have to be represented as LLVM ints, not wrapped in a * struct, because it's important for the FFI that they interoperate * with C integers/enums, and the ABI can treat structs differently. * For example, on i686-linux-gnu, a struct return value is passed by * storing to a hidden out parameter, whereas an integer would be * returned in a register. * * This test just checks that the ABIs for the enum and the plain * integer are compatible, rather than actually calling C code. * The unused parameter to `foo` is to increase the likelihood of * crashing if something goes wrong here. */ #[repr(u32)] enum Foo { A = 0, B = 23 } #[inline(never)] extern "C" fn foo(_x: usize) -> Foo { Foo::B } pub fn main() { unsafe { let f: extern "C" fn(usize) -> u32 = ::std::mem::transmute(foo as extern "C" fn(usize) -> Foo); assert_eq!(f(0xDEADBEEF), Foo::B as u32); } }