Related, follow-up question:

I've been wondering whether I could prepare a Context with all the object 
and function templates of my library, save it in a binary file (like V8 
does with the startup snapshot) and then load it on demand, in order to 
gain access to my library's code in the currently executing context. Is 
that even possible?

P.S.: I am sorry for asking many, possibly vague, questions. This is my 
first experience with V8 and I haven't been able to find a right and 
accurate solution yet, although I've read the V8 wiki on GitHub.

― Vangelis


On Wednesday, September 20, 2017 at 5:21:21 PM UTC+3, Vangelis Ts. wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I have written a C++ library and I would like to make it work like a 
> Node.js addon (see https://nodejs.org/api/addons.html#addons_c_addons), 
> but for V8.
>
> However, I am not sure what is the best way to do that. Some 
> thoughts/limitations are:
>
> 1. I would prefer to connect it directly with V8, without any extra 
> interfaces (like nbind, for example) or Node.js.
> 2. Compiling the library to JavaScript (e.g. using Emscripten) is not an 
> option.
> 3. Ideally, I would like to be able to load it in any instance of V8, such 
> as in Chrome, (maybe via the "require(…)" keyword, like a Node.js addon?), 
> so embedding the library with V8 and shipping it as an executable would not 
> be a neat choice. I also guess that this diminishes the option to compile 
> the library as a builtin V8 library function.
>
> I would really appreciate any suggestions you might have. 🙂
>
> ― Vangelis
>
>

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