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Shim (computing)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Software that intercepts and modifies behavior
Not to be confused with shm, an abbreviation for shared memory, often pronounced "shim", or a CPU shim, a physical spacer for a heat sink.
For other uses, see Shim (disambiguation).
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(June 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
The TI Ducati SIP core does video acceleration and accelerated image processing. The actual IC doing the calculations is controlled by software running on two Cortex-M3 microcontrollers. The operating system (running on the host CPU) only needs a shim to interface with the subsystem.

In computer programming, a shim is a library that transparently intercepts API calls and changes the arguments passed, handles the operation itself or redirects the operation elsewhere.[1] [2] Shims can be used to support an old API in a newer environment, or a new API in an older environment. Shims can also be used for running programs on different software platforms than they were developed for.

Shims for older APIs typically come about when the behavior of an API changes, thereby causing compatibility issues for older applications which still rely on the older functionality; in such cases, the older API can still be supported by a thin compatibility layer on top of the newer code. Shims for newer APIs are defined as: "a library that brings a new API to an older environment, using only the means of that environment."[3]

Examples

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  • Web polyfills implement newer web standards using older standards and JavaScript, if the newer standard is not available in a given web browser.[3]
  • Support of AppleTalk on Macintosh computers, during the brief period in which Apple Computer supported the Open Transport networking system. Thousands of Mac programs were based on the AppleTalk protocol; to support these programs, AppleTalk was re-implemented as an OpenTransport "stack", and then re-implemented as an API shim on top of this new library.
  • The Microsoft Windows Application Compatibility Toolkit (ACT) uses the term to mean backward compatible libraries. Shims simulate the behavior of older versions of Windows for legacy applications that rely on incorrect or deprecated functionality, or correct the way in which poorly written applications call unchanged APIs, for example to fix least-privileged user account (LUA) bugs.[4]
  • bind.so is a shim library for Linux that allows any application, regardless of permissions, to bind to a listening socket or specify outgoing IP address.[5] It uses the LD_PRELOAD mechanism, which allows shims and other libraries to be loaded into any program.
  • In the type tunnel pattern, a generic interface layer uses a family of shims to translate a heterogeneous set of types to a single primitive type used by an underlying API.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Your company's apps incompatible with Windows 7? Shim them, says Microsoft". Computerworld. 2009年03月21日. Archived from the original on 2014年04月07日. Retrieved 2014年04月05日.
  2. ^ "Demystifying Shims - or - Using the App Compat Toolkit to make your old stuff work with your new stuff". Microsoft TechNet. 2011年06月17日. Retrieved 2014年04月05日.
  3. ^ a b Axel Rauschmayer (2014). Speaking JavaScript. Shims Versus Polyfills.
  4. ^ "Microsoft Application Compatibility Toolkit 5.0". Microsoft. 2007年12月11日. Retrieved 2008年06月24日.
  5. ^ "Source code of bind.so". Daniel Ryde. 2010年01月09日. Archived from the original on 2014年03月30日. Retrieved 2014年04月05日.
  6. ^ Wilson, Matthew (August 2003), "Generalized String Manipulation: Access Shims and Type Tunneling", C/C++ Users Journal, 21 (8)
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