BIF and NIF functions ELI5

BIF Functions

Unless you work on OTP C source, you will never have to create own BIF function. If you want to implement own native function for your project, check out the next section about NIFs!

In the standard Erlang library most functions are implemented in Erlang. But many features of the virtual machine and internal functions are impossible to reach from pure Erlang. So they were written in C and are exported as BIF — built-in functions. BIFs are used in standard Erlang libraries and are statically built into emulator during compile-time.

When reading Erlang standard library modules you often can see functions with a single call to erlang:nif_error(...). These are BIF stubs. BEAM loader finds the native library and replaces these stubs with references to native implementation in C. You can also create BIF or NIF functions in other languages like C++ or Rust. You should also register a new BIF in a special file, called bif.tab which connects module:function name and the BIF when you build the emulator.

If you are curious, search for some function in OTP C source, for example: lists_reverse_2 in erl_bif_lists.c. A BIF function takes Process pointer and a pointer to registers, where it can access as many Term (Eterm C type) registers as it needs. A BIF must return a Term value or a THE_NON_VALUE for special execution control features like traps, yields and exceptions.

NIF Functions

NIFs are a different way of making native functions, more suited for separate compilation and to be loaded by user modules. NIF interface and type system is also simplified — they abstract away and hide many internal types, bits and fields of the emulator.

There is a good NIF tutorial in standard documentation and about a million of NIF functions written by users and available in various Github projects.

Still even if it is simplified, one must be careful! A badly written NIF is able to tip over the whole virtual machine or hog the resources and slow the execution to a grind.

See also

BEAM Wisdoms: Interfacing Erlang with the Outer World for a list of NIF, interoperability libraries, and port drivers for different programming languages.