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Fred Drake6659c301998-03-03 22:02:19 +00001\documentclass{manual}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002
Guido van Rossumd358afe1998-12-23 05:02:08 +00003% XXX PM explain how to add new types to Python
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00004
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00005\title{Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00006
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +00007\input{boilerplate}
Guido van Rossum83eb9621993-11-23 16:28:45 +00008
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00009% Tell \index to actually write the .idx file
10\makeindex
11
12\begin{document}
13
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000014\maketitle
15
Fred Drake9f86b661998-07-28 21:55:19 +000016\ifhtml
17\chapter*{Front Matter\label{front}}
18\fi
19
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +000020\input{copyright}
21
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +000022%begin{latexonly}
23\vspace{1in}
24%end{latexonly}
25\strong{\large Acknowledgements}
26
27% XXX This needs to be checked and updated manually before each
28% release.
29
30The following people have contributed sections to this document: Jim
31Fulton, Konrad Hinsen, Chris Phoenix, and Neil Schemenauer.
32
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000033\begin{abstract}
34
35\noindent
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000036Python is an interpreted, object-oriented programming language. This
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000037document describes how to write modules in C or \Cpp{} to extend the
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000038Python interpreter with new modules. Those modules can define new
39functions but also new object types and their methods. The document
40also describes how to embed the Python interpreter in another
41application, for use as an extension language. Finally, it shows how
42to compile and link extension modules so that they can be loaded
43dynamically (at run time) into the interpreter, if the underlying
44operating system supports this feature.
45
46This document assumes basic knowledge about Python. For an informal
Fred Drake9fa76f11999-11-10 16:01:43 +000047introduction to the language, see the
48\citetitle[../tut/tut.html]{Python Tutorial}. The
49\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} gives a more
50formal definition of the language. The
51\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} documents the
52existing object types, functions and modules (both built-in and
53written in Python) that give the language its wide application range.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000054
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000055For a detailed description of the whole Python/C API, see the separate
Fred Drake9fa76f11999-11-10 16:01:43 +000056\citetitle[../api/api.html]{Python/C API Reference Manual}.
Guido van Rossumfdacc581997-10-07 14:40:16 +000057
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000058\end{abstract}
59
Fred Drake4d4f9e71998-01-13 22:25:02 +000060\tableofcontents
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000061
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +000062
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +000063\chapter{Extending Python with C or \Cpp{} \label{intro}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000064
Guido van Rossum6f0132f1993-11-19 13:13:22 +000065
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000066It is quite easy to add new built-in modules to Python, if you know
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000067how to program in C. Such \dfn{extension modules} can do two things
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000068that can't be done directly in Python: they can implement new built-in
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000069object types, and they can call C library functions and system calls.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +000070
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +000071To support extensions, the Python API (Application Programmers
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000072Interface) defines a set of functions, macros and variables that
73provide access to most aspects of the Python run-time system. The
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000074Python API is incorporated in a C source file by including the header
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000075\code{"Python.h"}.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +000076
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000077The compilation of an extension module depends on its intended use as
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +000078well as on your system setup; details are given in later chapters.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +000079
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000080
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +000081\section{A Simple Example
82 \label{simpleExample}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +000083
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000084Let's create an extension module called \samp{spam} (the favorite food
85of Monty Python fans...) and let's say we want to create a Python
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000086interface to the C library function \cfunction{system()}.\footnote{An
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000087interface for this function already exists in the standard module
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +000088\module{os} --- it was chosen as a simple and straightfoward example.}
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +000089This function takes a null-terminated character string as argument and
90returns an integer. We want this function to be callable from Python
91as follows:
92
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +000093\begin{verbatim}
94>>> import spam
95>>> status = spam.system("ls -l")
96\end{verbatim}
97
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +000098Begin by creating a file \file{spammodule.c}. (Historically, if a
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +000099module is called \samp{spam}, the C file containing its implementation
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000100is called \file{spammodule.c}; if the module name is very long, like
101\samp{spammify}, the module name can be just \file{spammify.c}.)
102
103The first line of our file can be:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000104
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000105\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000106#include <Python.h>
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000107\end{verbatim}
108
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000109which pulls in the Python API (you can add a comment describing the
110purpose of the module and a copyright notice if you like).
111
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000112All user-visible symbols defined by \code{"Python.h"} have a prefix of
113\samp{Py} or \samp{PY}, except those defined in standard header files.
114For convenience, and since they are used extensively by the Python
115interpreter, \code{"Python.h"} includes a few standard header files:
116\code{<stdio.h>}, \code{<string.h>}, \code{<errno.h>}, and
117\code{<stdlib.h>}. If the latter header file does not exist on your
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000118system, it declares the functions \cfunction{malloc()},
119\cfunction{free()} and \cfunction{realloc()} directly.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000120
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000121The next thing we add to our module file is the C function that will
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000122be called when the Python expression \samp{spam.system(\var{string})}
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000123is evaluated (we'll see shortly how it ends up being called):
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000124
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000125\begin{verbatim}
126static PyObject *
127spam_system(self, args)
128 PyObject *self;
129 PyObject *args;
130{
131 char *command;
132 int sts;
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000133
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000134 if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s", &command))
135 return NULL;
136 sts = system(command);
137 return Py_BuildValue("i", sts);
138}
139\end{verbatim}
140
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000141There is a straightforward translation from the argument list in
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000142Python (e.g.\ the single expression \code{"ls -l"}) to the arguments
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000143passed to the C function. The C function always has two arguments,
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000144conventionally named \var{self} and \var{args}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000145
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000146The \var{self} argument is only used when the C function implements a
Fred Drake9226d8e1999-02-22 14:55:46 +0000147built-in method, not a function. In the example, \var{self} will
148always be a \NULL{} pointer, since we are defining a function, not a
149method. (This is done so that the interpreter doesn't have to
150understand two different types of C functions.)
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000151
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000152The \var{args} argument will be a pointer to a Python tuple object
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000153containing the arguments. Each item of the tuple corresponds to an
154argument in the call's argument list. The arguments are Python
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000155objects --- in order to do anything with them in our C function we have
156to convert them to C values. The function \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}
157in the Python API checks the argument types and converts them to C
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000158values. It uses a template string to determine the required types of
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000159the arguments as well as the types of the C variables into which to
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000160store the converted values. More about this later.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000161
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000162\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} returns true (nonzero) if all arguments have
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000163the right type and its components have been stored in the variables
164whose addresses are passed. It returns false (zero) if an invalid
165argument list was passed. In the latter case it also raises an
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000166appropriate exception so the calling function can return
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000167\NULL{} immediately (as we saw in the example).
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000168
169
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000170\section{Intermezzo: Errors and Exceptions
171 \label{errors}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000172
173An important convention throughout the Python interpreter is the
174following: when a function fails, it should set an exception condition
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000175and return an error value (usually a \NULL{} pointer). Exceptions
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000176are stored in a static global variable inside the interpreter; if this
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000177variable is \NULL{} no exception has occurred. A second global
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000178variable stores the ``associated value'' of the exception (the second
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000179argument to \keyword{raise}). A third variable contains the stack
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000180traceback in case the error originated in Python code. These three
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000181variables are the C equivalents of the Python variables
Fred Drakef9918f21999-02-05 18:30:49 +0000182\code{sys.exc_type}, \code{sys.exc_value} and \code{sys.exc_traceback} (see
Fred Drake9fa76f11999-11-10 16:01:43 +0000183the section on module \module{sys} in the
184\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}). It is
185important to know about them to understand how errors are passed
186around.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000187
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000188The Python API defines a number of functions to set various types of
189exceptions.
190
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000191The most common one is \cfunction{PyErr_SetString()}. Its arguments
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000192are an exception object and a C string. The exception object is
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000193usually a predefined object like \cdata{PyExc_ZeroDivisionError}. The
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000194C string indicates the cause of the error and is converted to a
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000195Python string object and stored as the ``associated value'' of the
196exception.
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000197
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000198Another useful function is \cfunction{PyErr_SetFromErrno()}, which only
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000199takes an exception argument and constructs the associated value by
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000200inspection of the global variable \cdata{errno}. The most
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000201general function is \cfunction{PyErr_SetObject()}, which takes two object
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000202arguments, the exception and its associated value. You don't need to
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000203\cfunction{Py_INCREF()} the objects passed to any of these functions.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000204
205You can test non-destructively whether an exception has been set with
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000206\cfunction{PyErr_Occurred()}. This returns the current exception object,
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000207or \NULL{} if no exception has occurred. You normally don't need
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000208to call \cfunction{PyErr_Occurred()} to see whether an error occurred in a
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000209function call, since you should be able to tell from the return value.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000210
Guido van Rossumd16ddb61996-12-13 02:38:17 +0000211When a function \var{f} that calls another function \var{g} detects
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000212that the latter fails, \var{f} should itself return an error value
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000213(e.g.\ \NULL{} or \code{-1}). It should \emph{not} call one of the
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000214\cfunction{PyErr_*()} functions --- one has already been called by \var{g}.
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000215\var{f}'s caller is then supposed to also return an error indication
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000216to \emph{its} caller, again \emph{without} calling \cfunction{PyErr_*()},
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000217and so on --- the most detailed cause of the error was already
218reported by the function that first detected it. Once the error
219reaches the Python interpreter's main loop, this aborts the currently
220executing Python code and tries to find an exception handler specified
221by the Python programmer.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000222
223(There are situations where a module can actually give a more detailed
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000224error message by calling another \cfunction{PyErr_*()} function, and in
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000225such cases it is fine to do so. As a general rule, however, this is
226not necessary, and can cause information about the cause of the error
227to be lost: most operations can fail for a variety of reasons.)
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000228
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000229To ignore an exception set by a function call that failed, the exception
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000230condition must be cleared explicitly by calling \cfunction{PyErr_Clear()}.
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000231The only time C code should call \cfunction{PyErr_Clear()} is if it doesn't
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000232want to pass the error on to the interpreter but wants to handle it
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000233completely by itself (e.g.\ by trying something else or pretending
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000234nothing happened).
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000235
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000236Every failing \cfunction{malloc()} call must be turned into an
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000237exception --- the direct caller of \cfunction{malloc()} (or
238\cfunction{realloc()}) must call \cfunction{PyErr_NoMemory()} and
239return a failure indicator itself. All the object-creating functions
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000240(for example, \cfunction{PyInt_FromLong()}) already do this, so this
241note is only relevant to those who call \cfunction{malloc()} directly.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000242
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000243Also note that, with the important exception of
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000244\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} and friends, functions that return an
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000245integer status usually return a positive value or zero for success and
246\code{-1} for failure, like \UNIX{} system calls.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000247
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000248Finally, be careful to clean up garbage (by making
249\cfunction{Py_XDECREF()} or \cfunction{Py_DECREF()} calls for objects
250you have already created) when you return an error indicator!
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000251
252The choice of which exception to raise is entirely yours. There are
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000253predeclared C objects corresponding to all built-in Python exceptions,
Fred Drakeabfd7d61999-02-16 17:34:51 +0000254e.g.\ \cdata{PyExc_ZeroDivisionError}, which you can use directly. Of
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000255course, you should choose exceptions wisely --- don't use
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000256\cdata{PyExc_TypeError} to mean that a file couldn't be opened (that
257should probably be \cdata{PyExc_IOError}). If something's wrong with
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000258the argument list, the \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} function usually
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000259raises \cdata{PyExc_TypeError}. If you have an argument whose value
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +0000260must be in a particular range or must satisfy other conditions,
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000261\cdata{PyExc_ValueError} is appropriate.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000262
263You can also define a new exception that is unique to your module.
264For this, you usually declare a static object variable at the
265beginning of your file, e.g.
266
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000267\begin{verbatim}
268static PyObject *SpamError;
269\end{verbatim}
270
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000271and initialize it in your module's initialization function
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000272(\cfunction{initspam()}) with an exception object, e.g.\ (leaving out
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000273the error checking for now):
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000274
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000275\begin{verbatim}
276void
277initspam()
278{
279 PyObject *m, *d;
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000280
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000281 m = Py_InitModule("spam", SpamMethods);
282 d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000283 SpamError = PyErr_NewException("spam.error", NULL, NULL);
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000284 PyDict_SetItemString(d, "error", SpamError);
285}
286\end{verbatim}
287
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000288Note that the Python name for the exception object is
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000289\exception{spam.error}. The \cfunction{PyErr_NewException()} function
290may create either a string or class, depending on whether the
Fred Drake9fa76f11999-11-10 16:01:43 +0000291\programopt{-X} flag was passed to the interpreter. If
292\programopt{-X} was used, \cdata{SpamError} will be a string object,
293otherwise it will be a class object with the base class being
294\exception{Exception}, described in the
295\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} under ``Built-in
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000296Exceptions.''
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000297
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000298
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000299\section{Back to the Example
300 \label{backToExample}}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000301
302Going back to our example function, you should now be able to
303understand this statement:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000304
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000305\begin{verbatim}
306 if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s", &command))
307 return NULL;
308\end{verbatim}
309
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000310It returns \NULL{} (the error indicator for functions returning
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000311object pointers) if an error is detected in the argument list, relying
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000312on the exception set by \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}. Otherwise the
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000313string value of the argument has been copied to the local variable
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000314\cdata{command}. This is a pointer assignment and you are not supposed
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000315to modify the string to which it points (so in Standard C, the variable
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000316\cdata{command} should properly be declared as \samp{const char
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000317*command}).
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000318
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000319The next statement is a call to the \UNIX{} function
320\cfunction{system()}, passing it the string we just got from
321\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000322
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000323\begin{verbatim}
324 sts = system(command);
325\end{verbatim}
326
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000327Our \function{spam.system()} function must return the value of
328\cdata{sts} as a Python object. This is done using the function
329\cfunction{Py_BuildValue()}, which is something like the inverse of
330\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}: it takes a format string and an
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000331arbitrary number of C values, and returns a new Python object.
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000332More info on \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} is given later.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000333
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000334\begin{verbatim}
335 return Py_BuildValue("i", sts);
336\end{verbatim}
337
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000338In this case, it will return an integer object. (Yes, even integers
339are objects on the heap in Python!)
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000340
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000341If you have a C function that returns no useful argument (a function
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000342returning \ctype{void}), the corresponding Python function must return
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000343\code{None}. You need this idiom to do so:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000344
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000345\begin{verbatim}
346 Py_INCREF(Py_None);
347 return Py_None;
348\end{verbatim}
349
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000350\cdata{Py_None} is the C name for the special Python object
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000351\code{None}. It is a genuine Python object rather than a \NULL{}
352pointer, which means ``error'' in most contexts, as we have seen.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000353
354
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000355\section{The Module's Method Table and Initialization Function
356 \label{methodTable}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000357
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000358I promised to show how \cfunction{spam_system()} is called from Python
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000359programs. First, we need to list its name and address in a ``method
360table'':
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000361
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000362\begin{verbatim}
363static PyMethodDef SpamMethods[] = {
364 ...
365 {"system", spam_system, METH_VARARGS},
366 ...
367 {NULL, NULL} /* Sentinel */
368};
369\end{verbatim}
370
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000371Note the third entry (\samp{METH_VARARGS}). This is a flag telling
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000372the interpreter the calling convention to be used for the C
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000373function. It should normally always be \samp{METH_VARARGS} or
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000374\samp{METH_VARARGS | METH_KEYWORDS}; a value of \code{0} means that an
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000375obsolete variant of \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} is used.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000376
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000377When using only \samp{METH_VARARGS}, the function should expect
378the Python-level parameters to be passed in as a tuple acceptable for
379parsing via \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}; more information on this
380function is provided below.
381
Fred Drake2d545232000-05-10 20:33:18 +0000382The \constant{METH_KEYWORDS} bit may be set in the third field if
383keyword arguments should be passed to the function. In this case, the
384C function should accept a third \samp{PyObject *} parameter which
385will be a dictionary of keywords. Use
386\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords()} to parse the arguments to
387such a function.
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000388
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000389The method table must be passed to the interpreter in the module's
Fred Drake2d545232000-05-10 20:33:18 +0000390initialization function. The initialization function must be named
391\cfunction{init\var{name}()}, where \var{name} is the name of the
392module, and should be the only non-\keyword{static} item defined in
393the module file:
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000394
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000395\begin{verbatim}
396void
397initspam()
398{
399 (void) Py_InitModule("spam", SpamMethods);
400}
401\end{verbatim}
402
Fred Drake65e69002000-05-10 20:36:34 +0000403Note that for \Cpp, this method must be declared \code{extern "C"}.
404
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000405When the Python program imports module \module{spam} for the first
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000406time, \cfunction{initspam()} is called. (See below for comments about
407embedding Python.) It calls
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000408\cfunction{Py_InitModule()}, which creates a ``module object'' (which
409is inserted in the dictionary \code{sys.modules} under the key
410\code{"spam"}), and inserts built-in function objects into the newly
411created module based upon the table (an array of \ctype{PyMethodDef}
412structures) that was passed as its second argument.
413\cfunction{Py_InitModule()} returns a pointer to the module object
414that it creates (which is unused here). It aborts with a fatal error
415if the module could not be initialized satisfactorily, so the caller
416doesn't need to check for errors.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000417
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000418When embedding Python, the \cfunction{initspam()} function is not
419called automatically unless there's an entry in the
420\cdata{_PyImport_Inittab} table. The easiest way to handle this is to
421statically initialize your statically-linked modules by directly
422calling \cfunction{initspam()} after the call to
423\cfunction{Py_Initialize()} or \cfunction{PyMac_Initialize()}:
424
425\begin{verbatim}
426int main(int argc, char **argv)
427{
428 /* Pass argv[0] to the Python interpreter */
429 Py_SetProgramName(argv[0]);
430
431 /* Initialize the Python interpreter. Required. */
432 Py_Initialize();
433
434 /* Add a static module */
435 initspam();
436\end{verbatim}
437
438And example may be found in the file \file{Demo/embed/demo.c} in the
439Python source distribution.
440
Fred Drakea48a0831999-06-18 19:17:28 +0000441\strong{Note:} Removing entries from \code{sys.modules} or importing
442compiled modules into multiple interpreters within a process (or
443following a \cfunction{fork()} without an intervening
444\cfunction{exec()}) can create problems for some extension modules.
445Extension module authors should exercise caution when initializing
446internal data structures.
447
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000448A more substantial example module is included in the Python source
449distribution as \file{Modules/xxmodule.c}. This file may be used as a
450template or simply read as an example. The \program{modulator.py}
451script included in the source distribution or Windows install provides
452a simple graphical user interface for declaring the functions and
453objects which a module should implement, and can generate a template
454which can be filled in. The script lives in the
455\file{Tools/modulator/} directory; see the \file{README} file there
456for more information.
457
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000458
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000459\section{Compilation and Linkage
460 \label{compilation}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000461
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000462There are two more things to do before you can use your new extension:
463compiling and linking it with the Python system. If you use dynamic
464loading, the details depend on the style of dynamic loading your
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000465system uses; see the chapters about building extension modules on
466\UNIX{} (chapter \ref{building-on-unix}) and Windows (chapter
467\ref{building-on-windows}) for more information about this.
468% XXX Add information about MacOS
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000469
470If you can't use dynamic loading, or if you want to make your module a
471permanent part of the Python interpreter, you will have to change the
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000472configuration setup and rebuild the interpreter. Luckily, this is
473very simple: just place your file (\file{spammodule.c} for example) in
Fred Drakea4a90dd1999-04-29 02:44:50 +0000474the \file{Modules/} directory of an unpacked source distribution, add
475a line to the file \file{Modules/Setup.local} describing your file:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000476
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000477\begin{verbatim}
478spam spammodule.o
479\end{verbatim}
480
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000481and rebuild the interpreter by running \program{make} in the toplevel
Fred Drakea4a90dd1999-04-29 02:44:50 +0000482directory. You can also run \program{make} in the \file{Modules/}
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000483subdirectory, but then you must first rebuild \file{Makefile}
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000484there by running `\program{make} Makefile'. (This is necessary each
485time you change the \file{Setup} file.)
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000486
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000487If your module requires additional libraries to link with, these can
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000488be listed on the line in the configuration file as well, for instance:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000489
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000490\begin{verbatim}
491spam spammodule.o -lX11
492\end{verbatim}
493
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000494\section{Calling Python Functions from C
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000495 \label{callingPython}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000496
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000497So far we have concentrated on making C functions callable from
498Python. The reverse is also useful: calling Python functions from C.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000499This is especially the case for libraries that support so-called
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000500``callback'' functions. If a C interface makes use of callbacks, the
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000501equivalent Python often needs to provide a callback mechanism to the
502Python programmer; the implementation will require calling the Python
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000503callback functions from a C callback. Other uses are also imaginable.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000504
505Fortunately, the Python interpreter is easily called recursively, and
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000506there is a standard interface to call a Python function. (I won't
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000507dwell on how to call the Python parser with a particular string as
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +0000508input --- if you're interested, have a look at the implementation of
Fred Drake9fa76f11999-11-10 16:01:43 +0000509the \programopt{-c} command line option in \file{Python/pythonmain.c}
510from the Python source code.)
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000511
512Calling a Python function is easy. First, the Python program must
513somehow pass you the Python function object. You should provide a
514function (or some other interface) to do this. When this function is
515called, save a pointer to the Python function object (be careful to
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +0000516\cfunction{Py_INCREF()} it!) in a global variable --- or wherever you
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000517see fit. For example, the following function might be part of a module
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000518definition:
519
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000520\begin{verbatim}
521static PyObject *my_callback = NULL;
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000522
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000523static PyObject *
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000524my_set_callback(dummy, args)
525 PyObject *dummy, *args;
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000526{
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000527 PyObject *result = NULL;
528 PyObject *temp;
529
530 if (PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O:set_callback", &temp)) {
531 if (!PyCallable_Check(temp)) {
532 PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError, "parameter must be callable");
533 return NULL;
534 }
535 Py_XINCREF(temp); /* Add a reference to new callback */
536 Py_XDECREF(my_callback); /* Dispose of previous callback */
537 my_callback = temp; /* Remember new callback */
538 /* Boilerplate to return "None" */
539 Py_INCREF(Py_None);
540 result = Py_None;
541 }
542 return result;
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000543}
544\end{verbatim}
545
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000546This function must be registered with the interpreter using the
Fred Drake5f342ac1999-04-29 02:47:40 +0000547\constant{METH_VARARGS} flag; this is described in section
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000548\ref{methodTable}, ``The Module's Method Table and Initialization
549Function.'' The \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} function and its
Fred Drake5f342ac1999-04-29 02:47:40 +0000550arguments are documented in section \ref{parseTuple}, ``Format Strings
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000551for \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}.''
552
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000553The macros \cfunction{Py_XINCREF()} and \cfunction{Py_XDECREF()}
554increment/decrement the reference count of an object and are safe in
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000555the presence of \NULL{} pointers (but note that \var{temp} will not be
Fred Drake5f342ac1999-04-29 02:47:40 +0000556\NULL{} in this context). More info on them in section
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000557\ref{refcounts}, ``Reference Counts.''
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000558
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000559Later, when it is time to call the function, you call the C function
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000560\cfunction{PyEval_CallObject()}. This function has two arguments, both
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000561pointers to arbitrary Python objects: the Python function, and the
562argument list. The argument list must always be a tuple object, whose
563length is the number of arguments. To call the Python function with
564no arguments, pass an empty tuple; to call it with one argument, pass
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000565a singleton tuple. \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} returns a tuple when its
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000566format string consists of zero or more format codes between
567parentheses. For example:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000568
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000569\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000570 int arg;
571 PyObject *arglist;
572 PyObject *result;
573 ...
574 arg = 123;
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000575 ...
576 /* Time to call the callback */
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000577 arglist = Py_BuildValue("(i)", arg);
578 result = PyEval_CallObject(my_callback, arglist);
579 Py_DECREF(arglist);
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000580\end{verbatim}
581
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000582\cfunction{PyEval_CallObject()} returns a Python object pointer: this is
583the return value of the Python function. \cfunction{PyEval_CallObject()} is
Guido van Rossumb92112d1995-03-20 14:24:09 +0000584``reference-count-neutral'' with respect to its arguments. In the
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000585example a new tuple was created to serve as the argument list, which
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000586is \cfunction{Py_DECREF()}-ed immediately after the call.
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000587
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000588The return value of \cfunction{PyEval_CallObject()} is ``new'': either it
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000589is a brand new object, or it is an existing object whose reference
590count has been incremented. So, unless you want to save it in a
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000591global variable, you should somehow \cfunction{Py_DECREF()} the result,
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000592even (especially!) if you are not interested in its value.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000593
594Before you do this, however, it is important to check that the return
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000595value isn't \NULL{}. If it is, the Python function terminated by
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000596raising an exception. If the C code that called
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000597\cfunction{PyEval_CallObject()} is called from Python, it should now
598return an error indication to its Python caller, so the interpreter
599can print a stack trace, or the calling Python code can handle the
600exception. If this is not possible or desirable, the exception should
601be cleared by calling \cfunction{PyErr_Clear()}. For example:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000602
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000603\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000604 if (result == NULL)
605 return NULL; /* Pass error back */
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000606 ...use result...
607 Py_DECREF(result);
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000608\end{verbatim}
609
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000610Depending on the desired interface to the Python callback function,
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000611you may also have to provide an argument list to
612\cfunction{PyEval_CallObject()}. In some cases the argument list is
613also provided by the Python program, through the same interface that
614specified the callback function. It can then be saved and used in the
615same manner as the function object. In other cases, you may have to
616construct a new tuple to pass as the argument list. The simplest way
617to do this is to call \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()}. For example, if
618you want to pass an integral event code, you might use the following
619code:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000620
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000621\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000622 PyObject *arglist;
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000623 ...
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000624 arglist = Py_BuildValue("(l)", eventcode);
625 result = PyEval_CallObject(my_callback, arglist);
626 Py_DECREF(arglist);
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000627 if (result == NULL)
628 return NULL; /* Pass error back */
629 /* Here maybe use the result */
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000630 Py_DECREF(result);
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000631\end{verbatim}
632
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000633Note the placement of \samp{Py_DECREF(arglist)} immediately after the
634call, before the error check! Also note that strictly spoken this
635code is not complete: \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} may run out of
636memory, and this should be checked.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000637
638
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000639\section{Format Strings for \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}
640 \label{parseTuple}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000641
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000642The \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} function is declared as follows:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000643
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000644\begin{verbatim}
645int PyArg_ParseTuple(PyObject *arg, char *format, ...);
646\end{verbatim}
647
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000648The \var{arg} argument must be a tuple object containing an argument
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000649list passed from Python to a C function. The \var{format} argument
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000650must be a format string, whose syntax is explained below. The
651remaining arguments must be addresses of variables whose type is
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000652determined by the format string. For the conversion to succeed, the
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000653\var{arg} object must match the format and the format must be
654exhausted.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000655
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000656Note that while \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} checks that the Python
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000657arguments have the required types, it cannot check the validity of the
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000658addresses of C variables passed to the call: if you make mistakes
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000659there, your code will probably crash or at least overwrite random bits
660in memory. So be careful!
661
662A format string consists of zero or more ``format units''. A format
663unit describes one Python object; it is usually a single character or
664a parenthesized sequence of format units. With a few exceptions, a
665format unit that is not a parenthesized sequence normally corresponds
Fred Drake3da06a61998-02-26 18:49:12 +0000666to a single address argument to \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}. In the
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000667following description, the quoted form is the format unit; the entry
668in (round) parentheses is the Python object type that matches the
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000669format unit; and the entry in [square] brackets is the type of the C
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000670variable(s) whose address should be passed. (Use the \samp{\&}
671operator to pass a variable's address.)
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000672
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000673Note that any Python object references which are provided to the
674caller are \emph{borrowed} references; do not decrement their
675reference count!
676
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +0000677\begin{description}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000678
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000679\item[\samp{s} (string or Unicode object) {[char *]}]
680Convert a Python string or Unicode object to a C pointer to a
681character string. You must not provide storage for the string
682itself; a pointer to an existing string is stored into the character
683pointer variable whose address you pass. The C string is
684null-terminated. The Python string must not contain embedded null
685bytes; if it does, a \exception{TypeError} exception is raised.
686Unicode objects are converted to C strings using the default
687encoding. If this conversion fails, an \exception{UnicodeError} is
688raised.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000689
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000690\item[\samp{s\#} (string, Unicode or any read buffer compatible object)
691{[char *, int]}]
692This variant on \samp{s} stores into two C variables, the first one a
693pointer to a character string, the second one its length. In this
694case the Python string may contain embedded null bytes. Unicode
695objects and all other read buffer compatible objects pass back a
696reference to the raw internal data representation. In case of Unicode
697objects the pointer points to a null-terminated buffer of 16-bit
698Py_UNICODE (UTF-16) data.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000699
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000700\item[\samp{z} (string or \code{None}) {[char *]}]
701Like \samp{s}, but the Python object may also be \code{None}, in which
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000702case the C pointer is set to \NULL{}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000703
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000704\item[\samp{z\#} (string or \code{None} or any read buffer compatible object)
705{[char *, int]}]
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000706This is to \samp{s\#} as \samp{z} is to \samp{s}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000707
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000708\item[\samp{u} (Unicode object) {[Py_UNICODE *]}]
Fred Drake25871c02000-05-03 15:17:02 +0000709Convert a Python Unicode object to a C pointer to a null-terminated
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000710buffer of 16-bit Unicode (UTF-16) data. As with \samp{s}, there is no need
Fred Drake25871c02000-05-03 15:17:02 +0000711to provide storage for the Unicode data buffer; a pointer to the
712existing Unicode data is stored into the Py_UNICODE pointer variable whose
713address you pass.
714
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000715\item[\samp{u\#} (Unicode object) {[Py_UNICODE *, int]}]
Fred Drake25871c02000-05-03 15:17:02 +0000716This variant on \samp{u} stores into two C variables, the first one
717a pointer to a Unicode data buffer, the second one its length.
718
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000719\item[\samp{es} (string, Unicode object or character buffer compatible
720object) {[const char *encoding, char **buffer]}]
721This variant on \samp{s} is used for encoding Unicode and objects
722convertible to Unicode into a character buffer. It only works for
723encoded data without embedded \NULL{} bytes.
724
725The variant reads one C variable and stores into two C variables, the
726first one a pointer to an encoding name string (\var{encoding}), the
727second a pointer to a pointer to a character buffer (\var{**buffer},
728the buffer used for storing the encoded data) and the third one a
729pointer to an integer (\var{*buffer_length}, the buffer length).
730
731The encoding name must map to a registered codec. If set to \NULL{},
732the default encoding is used.
733
Fred Drake4e159452000-08-11 17:09:23 +0000734\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} will allocate a buffer of the needed
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000735size using \cfunction{PyMem_NEW()}, copy the encoded data into this
736buffer and adjust \var{*buffer} to reference the newly allocated
737storage. The caller is responsible for calling
738\cfunction{PyMem_Free()} to free the allocated buffer after usage.
739
740\item[\samp{es\#} (string, Unicode object or character buffer compatible
741object) {[const char *encoding, char **buffer, int *buffer_length]}]
742This variant on \samp{s\#} is used for encoding Unicode and objects
743convertible to Unicode into a character buffer. It reads one C
744variable and stores into two C variables, the first one a pointer to
745an encoding name string (\var{encoding}), the second a pointer to a
746pointer to a character buffer (\var{**buffer}, the buffer used for
747storing the encoded data) and the third one a pointer to an integer
748(\var{*buffer_length}, the buffer length).
749
750The encoding name must map to a registered codec. If set to \NULL{},
751the default encoding is used.
752
753There are two modes of operation:
754
755If \var{*buffer} points a \NULL{} pointer,
Fred Drake4e159452000-08-11 17:09:23 +0000756\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} will allocate a buffer of the needed
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000757size using \cfunction{PyMem_NEW()}, copy the encoded data into this
758buffer and adjust \var{*buffer} to reference the newly allocated
759storage. The caller is responsible for calling
760\cfunction{PyMem_Free()} to free the allocated buffer after usage.
761
762If \var{*buffer} points to a non-\NULL{} pointer (an already allocated
Fred Drake4e159452000-08-11 17:09:23 +0000763buffer), \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} will use this location as
Marc-André Lemburg8b9835c2000-08-03 19:38:07 +0000764buffer and interpret \var{*buffer_length} as buffer size. It will then
765copy the encoded data into the buffer and 0-terminate it. Buffer
766overflow is signalled with an exception.
767
768In both cases, \var{*buffer_length} is set to the length of the
769encoded data without the trailing 0-byte.
770
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000771\item[\samp{b} (integer) {[char]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000772Convert a Python integer to a tiny int, stored in a C \ctype{char}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000773
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000774\item[\samp{h} (integer) {[short int]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000775Convert a Python integer to a C \ctype{short int}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000776
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000777\item[\samp{i} (integer) {[int]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000778Convert a Python integer to a plain C \ctype{int}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000779
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000780\item[\samp{l} (integer) {[long int]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000781Convert a Python integer to a C \ctype{long int}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000782
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000783\item[\samp{c} (string of length 1) {[char]}]
784Convert a Python character, represented as a string of length 1, to a
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000785C \ctype{char}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000786
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000787\item[\samp{f} (float) {[float]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000788Convert a Python floating point number to a C \ctype{float}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000789
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000790\item[\samp{d} (float) {[double]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000791Convert a Python floating point number to a C \ctype{double}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000792
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000793\item[\samp{D} (complex) {[Py_complex]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000794Convert a Python complex number to a C \ctype{Py_complex} structure.
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000795
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000796\item[\samp{O} (object) {[PyObject *]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000797Store a Python object (without any conversion) in a C object pointer.
798The C program thus receives the actual object that was passed. The
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000799object's reference count is not increased. The pointer stored is not
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000800\NULL{}.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000801
Fred Drake3fe985f1998-03-04 03:51:42 +0000802\item[\samp{O!} (object) {[\var{typeobject}, PyObject *]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000803Store a Python object in a C object pointer. This is similar to
804\samp{O}, but takes two C arguments: the first is the address of a
805Python type object, the second is the address of the C variable (of
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000806type \ctype{PyObject *}) into which the object pointer is stored.
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000807If the Python object does not have the required type,
808\exception{TypeError} is raised.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000809
Fred Drake3fe985f1998-03-04 03:51:42 +0000810\item[\samp{O\&} (object) {[\var{converter}, \var{anything}]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000811Convert a Python object to a C variable through a \var{converter}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000812function. This takes two arguments: the first is a function, the
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000813second is the address of a C variable (of arbitrary type), converted
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000814to \ctype{void *}. The \var{converter} function in turn is called as
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000815follows:
816
Fred Drake82ac24f1999-07-02 14:29:14 +0000817\var{status}\code{ = }\var{converter}\code{(}\var{object}, \var{address}\code{);}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000818
819where \var{object} is the Python object to be converted and
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +0000820\var{address} is the \ctype{void *} argument that was passed to
821\cfunction{PyArg_ConvertTuple()}. The returned \var{status} should be
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000822\code{1} for a successful conversion and \code{0} if the conversion
823has failed. When the conversion fails, the \var{converter} function
824should raise an exception.
825
826\item[\samp{S} (string) {[PyStringObject *]}]
Guido van Rossum2474d681998-02-26 17:07:11 +0000827Like \samp{O} but requires that the Python object is a string object.
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000828Raises \exception{TypeError} if the object is not a string object.
829The C variable may also be declared as \ctype{PyObject *}.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000830
Fred Drake25871c02000-05-03 15:17:02 +0000831\item[\samp{U} (Unicode string) {[PyUnicodeObject *]}]
832Like \samp{O} but requires that the Python object is a Unicode object.
833Raises \exception{TypeError} if the object is not a Unicode object.
834The C variable may also be declared as \ctype{PyObject *}.
835
Fred Drake8779f641999-08-27 15:28:15 +0000836\item[\samp{t\#} (read-only character buffer) {[char *, int]}]
837Like \samp{s\#}, but accepts any object which implements the read-only
838buffer interface. The \ctype{char *} variable is set to point to the
839first byte of the buffer, and the \ctype{int} is set to the length of
840the buffer. Only single-segment buffer objects are accepted;
841\exception{TypeError} is raised for all others.
842
843\item[\samp{w} (read-write character buffer) {[char *]}]
844Similar to \samp{s}, but accepts any object which implements the
845read-write buffer interface. The caller must determine the length of
846the buffer by other means, or use \samp{w\#} instead. Only
847single-segment buffer objects are accepted; \exception{TypeError} is
848raised for all others.
849
850\item[\samp{w\#} (read-write character buffer) {[char *, int]}]
851Like \samp{s\#}, but accepts any object which implements the
852read-write buffer interface. The \ctype{char *} variable is set to
853point to the first byte of the buffer, and the \ctype{int} is set to
854the length of the buffer. Only single-segment buffer objects are
855accepted; \exception{TypeError} is raised for all others.
856
Fred Drake3fe985f1998-03-04 03:51:42 +0000857\item[\samp{(\var{items})} (tuple) {[\var{matching-items}]}]
Fred Drake29fb54f1999-02-18 03:50:01 +0000858The object must be a Python sequence whose length is the number of
859format units in \var{items}. The C arguments must correspond to the
860individual format units in \var{items}. Format units for sequences
861may be nested.
862
863\strong{Note:} Prior to Python version 1.5.2, this format specifier
864only accepted a tuple containing the individual parameters, not an
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +0000865arbitrary sequence. Code which previously caused
Fred Drake29fb54f1999-02-18 03:50:01 +0000866\exception{TypeError} to be raised here may now proceed without an
867exception. This is not expected to be a problem for existing code.
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +0000868
869\end{description}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000870
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000871It is possible to pass Python long integers where integers are
Fred Drake1aedbd81998-02-16 14:47:27 +0000872requested; however no proper range checking is done --- the most
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000873significant bits are silently truncated when the receiving field is
874too small to receive the value (actually, the semantics are inherited
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +0000875from downcasts in C --- your mileage may vary).
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000876
877A few other characters have a meaning in a format string. These may
878not occur inside nested parentheses. They are:
879
880\begin{description}
881
882\item[\samp{|}]
883Indicates that the remaining arguments in the Python argument list are
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000884optional. The C variables corresponding to optional arguments should
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000885be initialized to their default value --- when an optional argument is
Fred Drake40e72f71998-03-03 19:37:38 +0000886not specified, \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} does not touch the contents
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +0000887of the corresponding C variable(s).
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000888
889\item[\samp{:}]
890The list of format units ends here; the string after the colon is used
891as the function name in error messages (the ``associated value'' of
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +0000892the exception that \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} raises).
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000893
894\item[\samp{;}]
895The list of format units ends here; the string after the colon is used
896as the error message \emph{instead} of the default error message.
897Clearly, \samp{:} and \samp{;} mutually exclude each other.
898
899\end{description}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000900
901Some example calls:
902
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000903\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000904 int ok;
905 int i, j;
906 long k, l;
907 char *s;
908 int size;
909
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000910 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, ""); /* No arguments */
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000911 /* Python call: f() */
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000912\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000913
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000914\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000915 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s", &s); /* A string */
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000916 /* Possible Python call: f('whoops!') */
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000917\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000918
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000919\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000920 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "lls", &k, &l, &s); /* Two longs and a string */
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000921 /* Possible Python call: f(1, 2, 'three') */
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000922\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000923
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000924\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000925 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "(ii)s#", &i, &j, &s, &size);
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000926 /* A pair of ints and a string, whose size is also returned */
Guido van Rossum7e924dd1997-02-10 16:51:52 +0000927 /* Possible Python call: f((1, 2), 'three') */
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000928\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000929
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000930\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000931 {
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000932 char *file;
933 char *mode = "r";
934 int bufsize = 0;
935 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s|si", &file, &mode, &bufsize);
936 /* A string, and optionally another string and an integer */
937 /* Possible Python calls:
938 f('spam')
939 f('spam', 'w')
940 f('spam', 'wb', 100000) */
941 }
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000942\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000943
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000944\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000945 {
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000946 int left, top, right, bottom, h, v;
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +0000947 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "((ii)(ii))(ii)",
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000948 &left, &top, &right, &bottom, &h, &v);
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000949 /* A rectangle and a point */
950 /* Possible Python call:
951 f(((0, 0), (400, 300)), (10, 10)) */
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +0000952 }
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000953\end{verbatim}
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000954
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +0000955\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000956 {
957 Py_complex c;
958 ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "D:myfunction", &c);
959 /* a complex, also providing a function name for errors */
960 /* Possible Python call: myfunction(1+2j) */
961 }
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +0000962\end{verbatim}
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000963
964
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +0000965\section{Keyword Parsing with \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords()}
966 \label{parseTupleAndKeywords}}
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000967
968The \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords()} function is declared as
969follows:
970
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +0000971\begin{verbatim}
972int PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(PyObject *arg, PyObject *kwdict,
973 char *format, char **kwlist, ...);
974\end{verbatim}
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000975
976The \var{arg} and \var{format} parameters are identical to those of the
977\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} function. The \var{kwdict} parameter
978is the dictionary of keywords received as the third parameter from the
979Python runtime. The \var{kwlist} parameter is a \NULL{}-terminated
980list of strings which identify the parameters; the names are matched
981with the type information from \var{format} from left to right.
982
983\strong{Note:} Nested tuples cannot be parsed when using keyword
984arguments! Keyword parameters passed in which are not present in the
Fred Drakecd05ca91998-03-07 05:32:08 +0000985\var{kwlist} will cause \exception{TypeError} to be raised.
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000986
987Here is an example module which uses keywords, based on an example by
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +0000988Geoff Philbrick (\email{philbrick@hks.com}):%
989\index{Philbrick, Geoff}
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +0000990
991\begin{verbatim}
992#include <stdio.h>
993#include "Python.h"
994
995static PyObject *
996keywdarg_parrot(self, args, keywds)
997 PyObject *self;
998 PyObject *args;
999 PyObject *keywds;
1000{
1001 int voltage;
1002 char *state = "a stiff";
1003 char *action = "voom";
1004 char *type = "Norwegian Blue";
1005
1006 static char *kwlist[] = {"voltage", "state", "action", "type", NULL};
1007
1008 if (!PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(args, keywds, "i|sss", kwlist,
1009 &voltage, &state, &action, &type))
1010 return NULL;
1011
1012 printf("-- This parrot wouldn't %s if you put %i Volts through it.\n",
1013 action, voltage);
1014 printf("-- Lovely plumage, the %s -- It's %s!\n", type, state);
1015
1016 Py_INCREF(Py_None);
1017
1018 return Py_None;
1019}
1020
1021static PyMethodDef keywdarg_methods[] = {
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +00001022 /* The cast of the function is necessary since PyCFunction values
1023 * only take two PyObject* parameters, and keywdarg_parrot() takes
1024 * three.
1025 */
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +00001026 {"parrot", (PyCFunction)keywdarg_parrot, METH_VARARGS|METH_KEYWORDS},
1027 {NULL, NULL} /* sentinel */
1028};
1029
1030void
1031initkeywdarg()
1032{
1033 /* Create the module and add the functions */
Fred Drakecd05ca91998-03-07 05:32:08 +00001034 Py_InitModule("keywdarg", keywdarg_methods);
Fred Drakeb6e50321998-02-04 20:26:31 +00001035}
1036\end{verbatim}
1037
1038
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001039\section{The \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} Function
1040 \label{buildValue}}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001041
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001042This function is the counterpart to \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}. It is
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001043declared as follows:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001044
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001045\begin{verbatim}
1046PyObject *Py_BuildValue(char *format, ...);
1047\end{verbatim}
1048
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001049It recognizes a set of format units similar to the ones recognized by
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001050\cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}, but the arguments (which are input to the
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001051function, not output) must not be pointers, just values. It returns a
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001052new Python object, suitable for returning from a C function called
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001053from Python.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001054
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001055One difference with \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}: while the latter
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001056requires its first argument to be a tuple (since Python argument lists
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001057are always represented as tuples internally),
1058\cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} does not always build a tuple. It builds
1059a tuple only if its format string contains two or more format units.
1060If the format string is empty, it returns \code{None}; if it contains
1061exactly one format unit, it returns whatever object is described by
1062that format unit. To force it to return a tuple of size 0 or one,
1063parenthesize the format string.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001064
Fred Drake2b9e1802000-06-28 15:32:29 +00001065When memory buffers are passed as parameters to supply data to build
1066objects, as for the \samp{s} and \samp{s\#} formats, the required data
1067is copied. Buffers provided by the caller are never referenced by the
Fred Drakeec105d02000-06-28 16:15:08 +00001068objects created by \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()}. In other words, if
1069your code invokes \cfunction{malloc()} and passes the allocated memory
1070to \cfunction{Py_BuildValue()}, your code is responsible for
1071calling \cfunction{free()} for that memory once
1072\cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} returns.
Fred Drake2b9e1802000-06-28 15:32:29 +00001073
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001074In the following description, the quoted form is the format unit; the
1075entry in (round) parentheses is the Python object type that the format
1076unit will return; and the entry in [square] brackets is the type of
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001077the C value(s) to be passed.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001078
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001079The characters space, tab, colon and comma are ignored in format
1080strings (but not within format units such as \samp{s\#}). This can be
1081used to make long format strings a tad more readable.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001082
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001083\begin{description}
1084
1085\item[\samp{s} (string) {[char *]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001086Convert a null-terminated C string to a Python object. If the C
Fred Drake2b9e1802000-06-28 15:32:29 +00001087string pointer is \NULL{}, \code{None} is used.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001088
1089\item[\samp{s\#} (string) {[char *, int]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001090Convert a C string and its length to a Python object. If the C string
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001091pointer is \NULL{}, the length is ignored and \code{None} is
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001092returned.
1093
1094\item[\samp{z} (string or \code{None}) {[char *]}]
1095Same as \samp{s}.
1096
1097\item[\samp{z\#} (string or \code{None}) {[char *, int]}]
1098Same as \samp{s\#}.
1099
Fred Drake3c3507f2000-04-28 14:43:33 +00001100\item[\samp{u} (Unicode string) {[Py_UNICODE *]}]
1101Convert a null-terminated buffer of Unicode (UCS-2) data to a Python
1102Unicode object. If the Unicode buffer pointer is \NULL,
1103\code{None} is returned.
1104
1105\item[\samp{u\#} (Unicode string) {[Py_UNICODE *, int]}]
1106Convert a Unicode (UCS-2) data buffer and its length to a Python
1107Unicode object. If the Unicode buffer pointer is \NULL, the length
1108is ignored and \code{None} is returned.
1109
Fred Drake25871c02000-05-03 15:17:02 +00001110\item[\samp{u} (Unicode string) {[Py_UNICODE *]}]
1111Convert a null-terminated buffer of Unicode (UCS-2) data to a Python Unicode
1112object. If the Unicode buffer pointer is \NULL{}, \code{None} is returned.
1113
1114\item[\samp{u\#} (Unicode string) {[Py_UNICODE *, int]}]
1115Convert a Unicode (UCS-2) data buffer and its length to a Python Unicode
1116object. If the Unicode buffer pointer is \NULL{}, the length is ignored and
1117\code{None} is returned.
1118
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001119\item[\samp{i} (integer) {[int]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001120Convert a plain C \ctype{int} to a Python integer object.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001121
1122\item[\samp{b} (integer) {[char]}]
1123Same as \samp{i}.
1124
1125\item[\samp{h} (integer) {[short int]}]
1126Same as \samp{i}.
1127
1128\item[\samp{l} (integer) {[long int]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001129Convert a C \ctype{long int} to a Python integer object.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001130
1131\item[\samp{c} (string of length 1) {[char]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001132Convert a C \ctype{int} representing a character to a Python string of
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001133length 1.
1134
1135\item[\samp{d} (float) {[double]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001136Convert a C \ctype{double} to a Python floating point number.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001137
1138\item[\samp{f} (float) {[float]}]
1139Same as \samp{d}.
1140
1141\item[\samp{O} (object) {[PyObject *]}]
1142Pass a Python object untouched (except for its reference count, which
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001143is incremented by one). If the object passed in is a \NULL{}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001144pointer, it is assumed that this was caused because the call producing
1145the argument found an error and set an exception. Therefore,
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001146\cfunction{Py_BuildValue()} will return \NULL{} but won't raise an
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001147exception. If no exception has been raised yet,
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001148\cdata{PyExc_SystemError} is set.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001149
1150\item[\samp{S} (object) {[PyObject *]}]
1151Same as \samp{O}.
1152
Fred Drake25871c02000-05-03 15:17:02 +00001153\item[\samp{U} (object) {[PyObject *]}]
1154Same as \samp{O}.
1155
Guido van Rossumd358afe1998-12-23 05:02:08 +00001156\item[\samp{N} (object) {[PyObject *]}]
1157Same as \samp{O}, except it doesn't increment the reference count on
1158the object. Useful when the object is created by a call to an object
1159constructor in the argument list.
1160
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001161\item[\samp{O\&} (object) {[\var{converter}, \var{anything}]}]
1162Convert \var{anything} to a Python object through a \var{converter}
1163function. The function is called with \var{anything} (which should be
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001164compatible with \ctype{void *}) as its argument and should return a
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001165``new'' Python object, or \NULL{} if an error occurred.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001166
1167\item[\samp{(\var{items})} (tuple) {[\var{matching-items}]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001168Convert a sequence of C values to a Python tuple with the same number
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001169of items.
1170
1171\item[\samp{[\var{items}]} (list) {[\var{matching-items}]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001172Convert a sequence of C values to a Python list with the same number
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001173of items.
1174
1175\item[\samp{\{\var{items}\}} (dictionary) {[\var{matching-items}]}]
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001176Convert a sequence of C values to a Python dictionary. Each pair of
1177consecutive C values adds one item to the dictionary, serving as key
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001178and value, respectively.
1179
1180\end{description}
1181
1182If there is an error in the format string, the
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001183\cdata{PyExc_SystemError} exception is raised and \NULL{} returned.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001184
1185Examples (to the left the call, to the right the resulting Python value):
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001186
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001187\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001188 Py_BuildValue("") None
1189 Py_BuildValue("i", 123) 123
Guido van Rossumf23e0fe1995-03-18 11:04:29 +00001190 Py_BuildValue("iii", 123, 456, 789) (123, 456, 789)
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001191 Py_BuildValue("s", "hello") 'hello'
1192 Py_BuildValue("ss", "hello", "world") ('hello', 'world')
1193 Py_BuildValue("s#", "hello", 4) 'hell'
1194 Py_BuildValue("()") ()
1195 Py_BuildValue("(i)", 123) (123,)
1196 Py_BuildValue("(ii)", 123, 456) (123, 456)
1197 Py_BuildValue("(i,i)", 123, 456) (123, 456)
1198 Py_BuildValue("[i,i]", 123, 456) [123, 456]
Guido van Rossumf23e0fe1995-03-18 11:04:29 +00001199 Py_BuildValue("{s:i,s:i}",
1200 "abc", 123, "def", 456) {'abc': 123, 'def': 456}
1201 Py_BuildValue("((ii)(ii)) (ii)",
1202 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) (((1, 2), (3, 4)), (5, 6))
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001203\end{verbatim}
1204
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001205
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001206\section{Reference Counts
1207 \label{refcounts}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001208
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001209In languages like C or \Cpp{}, the programmer is responsible for
1210dynamic allocation and deallocation of memory on the heap. In C,
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001211this is done using the functions \cfunction{malloc()} and
1212\cfunction{free()}. In \Cpp{}, the operators \keyword{new} and
1213\keyword{delete} are used with essentially the same meaning; they are
1214actually implemented using \cfunction{malloc()} and
1215\cfunction{free()}, so we'll restrict the following discussion to the
1216latter.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001217
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001218Every block of memory allocated with \cfunction{malloc()} should
1219eventually be returned to the pool of available memory by exactly one
1220call to \cfunction{free()}. It is important to call
1221\cfunction{free()} at the right time. If a block's address is
1222forgotten but \cfunction{free()} is not called for it, the memory it
1223occupies cannot be reused until the program terminates. This is
1224called a \dfn{memory leak}. On the other hand, if a program calls
1225\cfunction{free()} for a block and then continues to use the block, it
1226creates a conflict with re-use of the block through another
1227\cfunction{malloc()} call. This is called \dfn{using freed memory}.
1228It has the same bad consequences as referencing uninitialized data ---
1229core dumps, wrong results, mysterious crashes.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001230
1231Common causes of memory leaks are unusual paths through the code. For
1232instance, a function may allocate a block of memory, do some
1233calculation, and then free the block again. Now a change in the
1234requirements for the function may add a test to the calculation that
1235detects an error condition and can return prematurely from the
1236function. It's easy to forget to free the allocated memory block when
1237taking this premature exit, especially when it is added later to the
1238code. Such leaks, once introduced, often go undetected for a long
1239time: the error exit is taken only in a small fraction of all calls,
1240and most modern machines have plenty of virtual memory, so the leak
1241only becomes apparent in a long-running process that uses the leaking
1242function frequently. Therefore, it's important to prevent leaks from
1243happening by having a coding convention or strategy that minimizes
1244this kind of errors.
1245
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001246Since Python makes heavy use of \cfunction{malloc()} and
1247\cfunction{free()}, it needs a strategy to avoid memory leaks as well
1248as the use of freed memory. The chosen method is called
1249\dfn{reference counting}. The principle is simple: every object
1250contains a counter, which is incremented when a reference to the
1251object is stored somewhere, and which is decremented when a reference
1252to it is deleted. When the counter reaches zero, the last reference
1253to the object has been deleted and the object is freed.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001254
1255An alternative strategy is called \dfn{automatic garbage collection}.
1256(Sometimes, reference counting is also referred to as a garbage
1257collection strategy, hence my use of ``automatic'' to distinguish the
1258two.) The big advantage of automatic garbage collection is that the
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001259user doesn't need to call \cfunction{free()} explicitly. (Another claimed
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001260advantage is an improvement in speed or memory usage --- this is no
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001261hard fact however.) The disadvantage is that for C, there is no
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001262truly portable automatic garbage collector, while reference counting
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001263can be implemented portably (as long as the functions \cfunction{malloc()}
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001264and \cfunction{free()} are available --- which the C Standard guarantees).
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001265Maybe some day a sufficiently portable automatic garbage collector
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001266will be available for C. Until then, we'll have to live with
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001267reference counts.
1268
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001269\subsection{Reference Counting in Python
1270 \label{refcountsInPython}}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001271
1272There are two macros, \code{Py_INCREF(x)} and \code{Py_DECREF(x)},
1273which handle the incrementing and decrementing of the reference count.
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001274\cfunction{Py_DECREF()} also frees the object when the count reaches zero.
1275For flexibility, it doesn't call \cfunction{free()} directly --- rather, it
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001276makes a call through a function pointer in the object's \dfn{type
1277object}. For this purpose (and others), every object also contains a
1278pointer to its type object.
1279
1280The big question now remains: when to use \code{Py_INCREF(x)} and
1281\code{Py_DECREF(x)}? Let's first introduce some terms. Nobody
1282``owns'' an object; however, you can \dfn{own a reference} to an
1283object. An object's reference count is now defined as the number of
1284owned references to it. The owner of a reference is responsible for
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001285calling \cfunction{Py_DECREF()} when the reference is no longer
1286needed. Ownership of a reference can be transferred. There are three
1287ways to dispose of an owned reference: pass it on, store it, or call
1288\cfunction{Py_DECREF()}. Forgetting to dispose of an owned reference
1289creates a memory leak.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001290
1291It is also possible to \dfn{borrow}\footnote{The metaphor of
1292``borrowing'' a reference is not completely correct: the owner still
1293has a copy of the reference.} a reference to an object. The borrower
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001294of a reference should not call \cfunction{Py_DECREF()}. The borrower must
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001295not hold on to the object longer than the owner from which it was
1296borrowed. Using a borrowed reference after the owner has disposed of
1297it risks using freed memory and should be avoided
1298completely.\footnote{Checking that the reference count is at least 1
1299\strong{does not work} --- the reference count itself could be in
1300freed memory and may thus be reused for another object!}
1301
1302The advantage of borrowing over owning a reference is that you don't
1303need to take care of disposing of the reference on all possible paths
1304through the code --- in other words, with a borrowed reference you
1305don't run the risk of leaking when a premature exit is taken. The
1306disadvantage of borrowing over leaking is that there are some subtle
1307situations where in seemingly correct code a borrowed reference can be
1308used after the owner from which it was borrowed has in fact disposed
1309of it.
1310
1311A borrowed reference can be changed into an owned reference by calling
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001312\cfunction{Py_INCREF()}. This does not affect the status of the owner from
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001313which the reference was borrowed --- it creates a new owned reference,
1314and gives full owner responsibilities (i.e., the new owner must
1315dispose of the reference properly, as well as the previous owner).
1316
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001317
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001318\subsection{Ownership Rules
1319 \label{ownershipRules}}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001320
1321Whenever an object reference is passed into or out of a function, it
1322is part of the function's interface specification whether ownership is
1323transferred with the reference or not.
1324
1325Most functions that return a reference to an object pass on ownership
1326with the reference. In particular, all functions whose function it is
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001327to create a new object, e.g.\ \cfunction{PyInt_FromLong()} and
1328\cfunction{Py_BuildValue()}, pass ownership to the receiver. Even if in
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001329fact, in some cases, you don't receive a reference to a brand new
1330object, you still receive ownership of the reference. For instance,
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001331\cfunction{PyInt_FromLong()} maintains a cache of popular values and can
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001332return a reference to a cached item.
1333
1334Many functions that extract objects from other objects also transfer
1335ownership with the reference, for instance
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001336\cfunction{PyObject_GetAttrString()}. The picture is less clear, here,
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001337however, since a few common routines are exceptions:
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001338\cfunction{PyTuple_GetItem()}, \cfunction{PyList_GetItem()},
1339\cfunction{PyDict_GetItem()}, and \cfunction{PyDict_GetItemString()}
1340all return references that you borrow from the tuple, list or
1341dictionary.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001342
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001343The function \cfunction{PyImport_AddModule()} also returns a borrowed
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001344reference, even though it may actually create the object it returns:
1345this is possible because an owned reference to the object is stored in
1346\code{sys.modules}.
1347
1348When you pass an object reference into another function, in general,
1349the function borrows the reference from you --- if it needs to store
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001350it, it will use \cfunction{Py_INCREF()} to become an independent
1351owner. There are exactly two important exceptions to this rule:
1352\cfunction{PyTuple_SetItem()} and \cfunction{PyList_SetItem()}. These
1353functions take over ownership of the item passed to them --- even if
1354they fail! (Note that \cfunction{PyDict_SetItem()} and friends don't
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +00001355take over ownership --- they are ``normal.'')
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001356
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001357When a C function is called from Python, it borrows references to its
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001358arguments from the caller. The caller owns a reference to the object,
1359so the borrowed reference's lifetime is guaranteed until the function
1360returns. Only when such a borrowed reference must be stored or passed
1361on, it must be turned into an owned reference by calling
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001362\cfunction{Py_INCREF()}.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001363
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001364The object reference returned from a C function that is called from
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001365Python must be an owned reference --- ownership is tranferred from the
1366function to its caller.
1367
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001368
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001369\subsection{Thin Ice
1370 \label{thinIce}}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001371
1372There are a few situations where seemingly harmless use of a borrowed
1373reference can lead to problems. These all have to do with implicit
1374invocations of the interpreter, which can cause the owner of a
1375reference to dispose of it.
1376
1377The first and most important case to know about is using
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001378\cfunction{Py_DECREF()} on an unrelated object while borrowing a
1379reference to a list item. For instance:
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001380
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001381\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001382bug(PyObject *list) {
1383 PyObject *item = PyList_GetItem(list, 0);
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +00001384
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001385 PyList_SetItem(list, 1, PyInt_FromLong(0L));
1386 PyObject_Print(item, stdout, 0); /* BUG! */
1387}
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001388\end{verbatim}
1389
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001390This function first borrows a reference to \code{list[0]}, then
1391replaces \code{list[1]} with the value \code{0}, and finally prints
1392the borrowed reference. Looks harmless, right? But it's not!
1393
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001394Let's follow the control flow into \cfunction{PyList_SetItem()}. The list
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001395owns references to all its items, so when item 1 is replaced, it has
1396to dispose of the original item 1. Now let's suppose the original
1397item 1 was an instance of a user-defined class, and let's further
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001398suppose that the class defined a \method{__del__()} method. If this
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001399class instance has a reference count of 1, disposing of it will call
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001400its \method{__del__()} method.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001401
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001402Since it is written in Python, the \method{__del__()} method can execute
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001403arbitrary Python code. Could it perhaps do something to invalidate
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001404the reference to \code{item} in \cfunction{bug()}? You bet! Assuming
1405that the list passed into \cfunction{bug()} is accessible to the
1406\method{__del__()} method, it could execute a statement to the effect of
1407\samp{del list[0]}, and assuming this was the last reference to that
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001408object, it would free the memory associated with it, thereby
1409invalidating \code{item}.
1410
1411The solution, once you know the source of the problem, is easy:
1412temporarily increment the reference count. The correct version of the
1413function reads:
1414
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001415\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001416no_bug(PyObject *list) {
1417 PyObject *item = PyList_GetItem(list, 0);
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +00001418
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001419 Py_INCREF(item);
1420 PyList_SetItem(list, 1, PyInt_FromLong(0L));
1421 PyObject_Print(item, stdout, 0);
1422 Py_DECREF(item);
1423}
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001424\end{verbatim}
1425
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001426This is a true story. An older version of Python contained variants
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001427of this bug and someone spent a considerable amount of time in a C
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001428debugger to figure out why his \method{__del__()} methods would fail...
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001429
1430The second case of problems with a borrowed reference is a variant
1431involving threads. Normally, multiple threads in the Python
1432interpreter can't get in each other's way, because there is a global
1433lock protecting Python's entire object space. However, it is possible
1434to temporarily release this lock using the macro
1435\code{Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS}, and to re-acquire it using
1436\code{Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS}. This is common around blocking I/O
1437calls, to let other threads use the CPU while waiting for the I/O to
1438complete. Obviously, the following function has the same problem as
1439the previous one:
1440
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001441\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001442bug(PyObject *list) {
1443 PyObject *item = PyList_GetItem(list, 0);
1444 Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
1445 ...some blocking I/O call...
1446 Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
1447 PyObject_Print(item, stdout, 0); /* BUG! */
1448}
Fred Drake1e11a5c1998-02-13 07:11:32 +00001449\end{verbatim}
1450
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001451
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001452\subsection{NULL Pointers
1453 \label{nullPointers}}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001454
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +00001455In general, functions that take object references as arguments do not
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001456expect you to pass them \NULL{} pointers, and will dump core (or
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001457cause later core dumps) if you do so. Functions that return object
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001458references generally return \NULL{} only to indicate that an
1459exception occurred. The reason for not testing for \NULL{}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001460arguments is that functions often pass the objects they receive on to
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001461other function --- if each function were to test for \NULL{},
Fred Drake1739be52000-06-30 17:58:34 +00001462there would be a lot of redundant tests and the code would run more
1463slowly.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001464
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001465It is better to test for \NULL{} only at the ``source'', i.e.\ when a
1466pointer that may be \NULL{} is received, e.g.\ from
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001467\cfunction{malloc()} or from a function that may raise an exception.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001468
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001469The macros \cfunction{Py_INCREF()} and \cfunction{Py_DECREF()}
Fred Drakea0dbddf1998-04-02 06:50:02 +00001470do not check for \NULL{} pointers --- however, their variants
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00001471\cfunction{Py_XINCREF()} and \cfunction{Py_XDECREF()} do.
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001472
1473The macros for checking for a particular object type
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001474(\code{Py\var{type}_Check()}) don't check for \NULL{} pointers ---
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001475again, there is much code that calls several of these in a row to test
1476an object against various different expected types, and this would
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001477generate redundant tests. There are no variants with \NULL{}
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001478checking.
1479
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001480The C function calling mechanism guarantees that the argument list
1481passed to C functions (\code{args} in the examples) is never
Fred Drake52e2d511999-04-05 21:26:37 +00001482\NULL{} --- in fact it guarantees that it is always a tuple.\footnote{
1483These guarantees don't hold when you use the ``old'' style
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001484calling convention --- this is still found in much existing code.}
1485
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001486It is a severe error to ever let a \NULL{} pointer ``escape'' to
Fred Drake1739be52000-06-30 17:58:34 +00001487the Python user.
1488
1489% Frank Stajano:
1490% A pedagogically buggy example, along the lines of the previous listing,
1491% would be helpful here -- showing in more concrete terms what sort of
1492% actions could cause the problem. I can't very well imagine it from the
1493% description.
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +00001494
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001495
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00001496\section{Writing Extensions in \Cpp{}
1497 \label{cplusplus}}
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +00001498
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00001499It is possible to write extension modules in \Cpp{}. Some restrictions
Guido van Rossumed39cd01995-10-08 00:17:19 +00001500apply. If the main program (the Python interpreter) is compiled and
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001501linked by the C compiler, global or static objects with constructors
Guido van Rossumed39cd01995-10-08 00:17:19 +00001502cannot be used. This is not a problem if the main program is linked
Guido van Rossumafcd5891998-02-05 19:59:39 +00001503by the \Cpp{} compiler. Functions that will be called by the
1504Python interpreter (in particular, module initalization functions)
1505have to be declared using \code{extern "C"}.
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +00001506It is unnecessary to enclose the Python header files in
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001507\code{extern "C" \{...\}} --- they use this form already if the symbol
Fred Drake0fd82681998-01-09 05:39:38 +00001508\samp{__cplusplus} is defined (all recent \Cpp{} compilers define this
Guido van Rossum5049bcb1995-03-13 16:55:23 +00001509symbol).
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00001510
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001511
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001512\section{Providing a C API for an Extension Module
1513 \label{using-cobjects}}
1514\sectionauthor{Konrad Hinsen}{hinsen@cnrs-orleans.fr}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001515
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001516Many extension modules just provide new functions and types to be
1517used from Python, but sometimes the code in an extension module can
1518be useful for other extension modules. For example, an extension
1519module could implement a type ``collection'' which works like lists
1520without order. Just like the standard Python list type has a C API
1521which permits extension modules to create and manipulate lists, this
1522new collection type should have a set of C functions for direct
1523manipulation from other extension modules.
1524
1525At first sight this seems easy: just write the functions (without
1526declaring them \keyword{static}, of course), provide an appropriate
1527header file, and document the C API. And in fact this would work if
1528all extension modules were always linked statically with the Python
1529interpreter. When modules are used as shared libraries, however, the
1530symbols defined in one module may not be visible to another module.
1531The details of visibility depend on the operating system; some systems
1532use one global namespace for the Python interpreter and all extension
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001533modules (e.g.\ Windows), whereas others require an explicit list of
1534imported symbols at module link time (e.g.\ AIX), or offer a choice of
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001535different strategies (most Unices). And even if symbols are globally
1536visible, the module whose functions one wishes to call might not have
1537been loaded yet!
1538
1539Portability therefore requires not to make any assumptions about
1540symbol visibility. This means that all symbols in extension modules
1541should be declared \keyword{static}, except for the module's
1542initialization function, in order to avoid name clashes with other
1543extension modules (as discussed in section~\ref{methodTable}). And it
1544means that symbols that \emph{should} be accessible from other
1545extension modules must be exported in a different way.
1546
1547Python provides a special mechanism to pass C-level information (i.e.
1548pointers) from one extension module to another one: CObjects.
1549A CObject is a Python data type which stores a pointer (\ctype{void
1550*}). CObjects can only be created and accessed via their C API, but
1551they can be passed around like any other Python object. In particular,
1552they can be assigned to a name in an extension module's namespace.
1553Other extension modules can then import this module, retrieve the
1554value of this name, and then retrieve the pointer from the CObject.
1555
1556There are many ways in which CObjects can be used to export the C API
1557of an extension module. Each name could get its own CObject, or all C
1558API pointers could be stored in an array whose address is published in
1559a CObject. And the various tasks of storing and retrieving the pointers
1560can be distributed in different ways between the module providing the
1561code and the client modules.
1562
1563The following example demonstrates an approach that puts most of the
1564burden on the writer of the exporting module, which is appropriate
1565for commonly used library modules. It stores all C API pointers
1566(just one in the example!) in an array of \ctype{void} pointers which
1567becomes the value of a CObject. The header file corresponding to
1568the module provides a macro that takes care of importing the module
1569and retrieving its C API pointers; client modules only have to call
1570this macro before accessing the C API.
1571
1572The exporting module is a modification of the \module{spam} module from
1573section~\ref{simpleExample}. The function \function{spam.system()}
1574does not call the C library function \cfunction{system()} directly,
1575but a function \cfunction{PySpam_System()}, which would of course do
1576something more complicated in reality (such as adding ``spam'' to
1577every command). This function \cfunction{PySpam_System()} is also
1578exported to other extension modules.
1579
1580The function \cfunction{PySpam_System()} is a plain C function,
1581declared \keyword{static} like everything else:
1582
1583\begin{verbatim}
1584static int
1585PySpam_System(command)
1586 char *command;
1587{
1588 return system(command);
1589}
1590\end{verbatim}
1591
1592The function \cfunction{spam_system()} is modified in a trivial way:
1593
1594\begin{verbatim}
1595static PyObject *
1596spam_system(self, args)
1597 PyObject *self;
1598 PyObject *args;
1599{
1600 char *command;
1601 int sts;
1602
1603 if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s", &command))
1604 return NULL;
1605 sts = PySpam_System(command);
1606 return Py_BuildValue("i", sts);
1607}
1608\end{verbatim}
1609
1610In the beginning of the module, right after the line
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001611
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001612\begin{verbatim}
1613#include "Python.h"
1614\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001615
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001616two more lines must be added:
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001617
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001618\begin{verbatim}
1619#define SPAM_MODULE
1620#include "spammodule.h"
1621\end{verbatim}
1622
1623The \code{\#define} is used to tell the header file that it is being
1624included in the exporting module, not a client module. Finally,
1625the module's initialization function must take care of initializing
1626the C API pointer array:
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001627
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001628\begin{verbatim}
1629void
1630initspam()
1631{
1632 PyObject *m, *d;
1633 static void *PySpam_API[PySpam_API_pointers];
1634 PyObject *c_api_object;
1635 m = Py_InitModule("spam", SpamMethods);
1636
1637 /* Initialize the C API pointer array */
1638 PySpam_API[PySpam_System_NUM] = (void *)PySpam_System;
1639
1640 /* Create a CObject containing the API pointer array's address */
1641 c_api_object = PyCObject_FromVoidPtr((void *)PySpam_API, NULL);
1642
1643 /* Create a name for this object in the module's namespace */
1644 d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
1645 PyDict_SetItemString(d, "_C_API", c_api_object);
1646}
1647\end{verbatim}
1648
1649Note that \code{PySpam_API} is declared \code{static}; otherwise
1650the pointer array would disappear when \code{initspam} terminates!
1651
1652The bulk of the work is in the header file \file{spammodule.h},
1653which looks like this:
1654
1655\begin{verbatim}
1656#ifndef Py_SPAMMODULE_H
1657#define Py_SPAMMODULE_H
1658#ifdef __cplusplus
1659extern "C" {
1660#endif
1661
1662/* Header file for spammodule */
1663
1664/* C API functions */
1665#define PySpam_System_NUM 0
1666#define PySpam_System_RETURN int
Greg Steinc2844af2000-07-09 16:27:33 +00001667#define PySpam_System_PROTO (char *command)
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001668
1669/* Total number of C API pointers */
1670#define PySpam_API_pointers 1
1671
1672
1673#ifdef SPAM_MODULE
1674/* This section is used when compiling spammodule.c */
1675
1676static PySpam_System_RETURN PySpam_System PySpam_System_PROTO;
1677
1678#else
1679/* This section is used in modules that use spammodule's API */
1680
1681static void **PySpam_API;
1682
1683#define PySpam_System \
1684 (*(PySpam_System_RETURN (*)PySpam_System_PROTO) PySpam_API[PySpam_System_NUM])
1685
1686#define import_spam() \
1687{ \
1688 PyObject *module = PyImport_ImportModule("spam"); \
1689 if (module != NULL) { \
1690 PyObject *module_dict = PyModule_GetDict(module); \
1691 PyObject *c_api_object = PyDict_GetItemString(module_dict, "_C_API"); \
1692 if (PyCObject_Check(c_api_object)) { \
1693 PySpam_API = (void **)PyCObject_AsVoidPtr(c_api_object); \
1694 } \
1695 } \
1696}
1697
1698#endif
1699
1700#ifdef __cplusplus
1701}
1702#endif
1703
1704#endif /* !defined(Py_SPAMMODULE_H */
1705\end{verbatim}
1706
1707All that a client module must do in order to have access to the
1708function \cfunction{PySpam_System()} is to call the function (or
1709rather macro) \cfunction{import_spam()} in its initialization
1710function:
1711
1712\begin{verbatim}
1713void
1714initclient()
1715{
1716 PyObject *m;
1717
1718 Py_InitModule("client", ClientMethods);
1719 import_spam();
1720}
1721\end{verbatim}
1722
1723The main disadvantage of this approach is that the file
1724\file{spammodule.h} is rather complicated. However, the
1725basic structure is the same for each function that is
1726exported, so it has to be learned only once.
1727
1728Finally it should be mentioned that CObjects offer additional
1729functionality, which is especially useful for memory allocation and
1730deallocation of the pointer stored in a CObject. The details
Fred Drake9fa76f11999-11-10 16:01:43 +00001731are described in the \citetitle[../api/api.html]{Python/C API
1732Reference Manual} in the section ``CObjects'' and in the
1733implementation of CObjects (files \file{Include/cobject.h} and
1734\file{Objects/cobject.c} in the Python source code distribution).
Fred Drakeec9fbe91999-02-15 16:20:25 +00001735
1736
1737\chapter{Building C and \Cpp{} Extensions on \UNIX{}
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001738 \label{building-on-unix}}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001739
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001740\sectionauthor{Jim Fulton}{jim@Digicool.com}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001741
1742
1743%The make file make file, building C extensions on Unix
1744
1745
1746Starting in Python 1.4, Python provides a special make file for
1747building make files for building dynamically-linked extensions and
1748custom interpreters. The make file make file builds a make file
1749that reflects various system variables determined by configure when
1750the Python interpreter was built, so people building module's don't
1751have to resupply these settings. This vastly simplifies the process
1752of building extensions and custom interpreters on Unix systems.
1753
1754The make file make file is distributed as the file
1755\file{Misc/Makefile.pre.in} in the Python source distribution. The
1756first step in building extensions or custom interpreters is to copy
1757this make file to a development directory containing extension module
1758source.
1759
1760The make file make file, \file{Makefile.pre.in} uses metadata
1761provided in a file named \file{Setup}. The format of the \file{Setup}
1762file is the same as the \file{Setup} (or \file{Setup.in}) file
1763provided in the \file{Modules/} directory of the Python source
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001764distribution. The \file{Setup} file contains variable definitions:
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001765
1766\begin{verbatim}
1767EC=/projects/ExtensionClass
1768\end{verbatim}
1769
1770and module description lines. It can also contain blank lines and
1771comment lines that start with \character{\#}.
1772
1773A module description line includes a module name, source files,
1774options, variable references, and other input files, such
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +00001775as libraries or object files. Consider a simple example:
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001776
1777\begin{verbatim}
1778ExtensionClass ExtensionClass.c
1779\end{verbatim}
1780
1781This is the simplest form of a module definition line. It defines a
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001782module, \module{ExtensionClass}, which has a single source file,
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001783\file{ExtensionClass.c}.
1784
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001785This slightly more complex example uses an \strong{-I} option to
1786specify an include directory:
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001787
1788\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001789EC=/projects/ExtensionClass
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001790cPersistence cPersistence.c -I$(EC)
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001791\end{verbatim} % $ <-- bow to font lock
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001792
1793This example also illustrates the format for variable references.
1794
1795For systems that support dynamic linking, the \file{Setup} file should
1796begin:
1797
1798\begin{verbatim}
1799*shared*
1800\end{verbatim}
1801
1802to indicate that the modules defined in \file{Setup} are to be built
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +00001803as dynamically linked modules. A line containing only \samp{*static*}
1804can be used to indicate the subsequently listed modules should be
1805statically linked.
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001806
1807Here is a complete \file{Setup} file for building a
1808\module{cPersistent} module:
1809
1810\begin{verbatim}
1811# Set-up file to build the cPersistence module.
1812# Note that the text should begin in the first column.
1813*shared*
1814
1815# We need the path to the directory containing the ExtensionClass
1816# include file.
1817EC=/projects/ExtensionClass
1818cPersistence cPersistence.c -I$(EC)
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001819\end{verbatim} % $ <-- bow to font lock
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001820
1821After the \file{Setup} file has been created, \file{Makefile.pre.in}
1822is run with the \samp{boot} target to create a make file:
1823
1824\begin{verbatim}
1825make -f Makefile.pre.in boot
1826\end{verbatim}
1827
1828This creates the file, Makefile. To build the extensions, simply
1829run the created make file:
1830
1831\begin{verbatim}
1832make
1833\end{verbatim}
1834
1835It's not necessary to re-run \file{Makefile.pre.in} if the
1836\file{Setup} file is changed. The make file automatically rebuilds
1837itself if the \file{Setup} file changes.
1838
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001839
1840\section{Building Custom Interpreters \label{custom-interps}}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001841
1842The make file built by \file{Makefile.pre.in} can be run with the
1843\samp{static} target to build an interpreter:
1844
1845\begin{verbatim}
1846make static
1847\end{verbatim}
1848
1849Any modules defined in the Setup file before the \samp{*shared*} line
1850will be statically linked into the interpreter. Typically, a
1851\samp{*shared*} line is omitted from the Setup file when a custom
1852interpreter is desired.
1853
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001854
1855\section{Module Definition Options \label{module-defn-options}}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001856
1857Several compiler options are supported:
1858
1859\begin{tableii}{l|l}{}{Option}{Meaning}
1860 \lineii{-C}{Tell the C pre-processor not to discard comments}
1861 \lineii{-D\var{name}=\var{value}}{Define a macro}
1862 \lineii{-I\var{dir}}{Specify an include directory, \var{dir}}
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001863 \lineii{-L\var{dir}}{Specify a link-time library directory, \var{dir}}
1864 \lineii{-R\var{dir}}{Specify a run-time library directory, \var{dir}}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001865 \lineii{-l\var{lib}}{Link a library, \var{lib}}
1866 \lineii{-U\var{name}}{Undefine a macro}
1867\end{tableii}
1868
1869Other compiler options can be included (snuck in) by putting them
Fred Drakedc12ec81999-03-09 18:36:55 +00001870in variables.
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001871
1872Source files can include files with \file{.c}, \file{.C}, \file{.cc},
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001873\file{.cpp}, \file{.cxx}, and \file{.c++} extensions.
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001874
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001875Other input files include files with \file{.a}, \file{.o}, \file{.sl},
1876and \file{.so} extensions.
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001877
1878
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001879\section{Example \label{module-defn-example}}
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001880
1881Here is a more complicated example from \file{Modules/Setup.in}:
1882
1883\begin{verbatim}
1884GMP=/ufs/guido/src/gmp
1885mpz mpzmodule.c -I$(GMP) $(GMP)/libgmp.a
1886\end{verbatim}
1887
1888which could also be written as:
1889
1890\begin{verbatim}
1891mpz mpzmodule.c -I$(GMP) -L$(GMP) -lgmp
1892\end{verbatim}
1893
1894
1895\section{Distributing your extension modules
1896 \label{distributing}}
1897
1898When distributing your extension modules in source form, make sure to
1899include a \file{Setup} file. The \file{Setup} file should be named
1900\file{Setup.in} in the distribution. The make file make file,
1901\file{Makefile.pre.in}, will copy \file{Setup.in} to \file{Setup}.
1902Distributing a \file{Setup.in} file makes it easy for people to
1903customize the \file{Setup} file while keeping the original in
1904\file{Setup.in}.
1905
1906It is a good idea to include a copy of \file{Makefile.pre.in} for
1907people who do not have a source distribution of Python.
1908
1909Do not distribute a make file. People building your modules
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001910should use \file{Makefile.pre.in} to build their own make file. A
1911\file{README} file included in the package should provide simple
1912instructions to perform the build.
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001913
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001914Work is being done to make building and installing Python extensions
1915easier for all platforms; this work in likely to supplant the current
1916approach at some point in the future. For more information or to
1917participate in the effort, refer to
1918\url{http://www.python.org/sigs/distutils-sig/} on the Python Web
1919site.
1920
Fred Drakee743fd01998-11-24 17:07:29 +00001921
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001922\chapter{Building C and \Cpp{} Extensions on Windows
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001923 \label{building-on-windows}}
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001924
1925
1926This chapter briefly explains how to create a Windows extension module
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001927for Python using Microsoft Visual \Cpp{}, and follows with more
1928detailed background information on how it works. The explanatory
1929material is useful for both the Windows programmer learning to build
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +00001930Python extensions and the \UNIX{} programmer interested in producing
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001931software which can be successfully built on both \UNIX{} and Windows.
1932
Fred Drake8e015171999-02-17 18:12:14 +00001933
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001934\section{A Cookbook Approach \label{win-cookbook}}
1935
1936\sectionauthor{Neil Schemenauer}{neil_schemenauer@transcanada.com}
1937
1938This section provides a recipe for building a Python extension on
1939Windows.
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001940
1941Grab the binary installer from \url{http://www.python.org/} and
1942install Python. The binary installer has all of the required header
1943files except for \file{config.h}.
1944
1945Get the source distribution and extract it into a convenient location.
1946Copy the \file{config.h} from the \file{PC/} directory into the
1947\file{include/} directory created by the installer.
1948
1949Create a \file{Setup} file for your extension module, as described in
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +00001950chapter \ref{building-on-unix}.
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001951
1952Get David Ascher's \file{compile.py} script from
Fred Drakec0fcbc11999-04-29 02:30:04 +00001953\url{http://starship.python.net/crew/da/compile/}. Run the script to
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001954create Microsoft Visual \Cpp{} project files.
1955
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +00001956Open the DSW file in Visual \Cpp{} and select \strong{Build}.
Fred Drake3de61bc1999-02-16 21:14:16 +00001957
1958If your module creates a new type, you may have trouble with this line:
1959
1960\begin{verbatim}
1961 PyObject_HEAD_INIT(&PyType_Type)
1962\end{verbatim}
1963
1964Change it to:
1965
1966\begin{verbatim}
1967 PyObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL)
1968\end{verbatim}
1969
1970and add the following to the module initialization function:
1971
1972\begin{verbatim}
1973 MyObject_Type.ob_type = &PyType_Type;
1974\end{verbatim}
1975
1976Refer to section 3 of the Python FAQ
1977(\url{http://www.python.org/doc/FAQ.html}) for details on why you must
1978do this.
1979
1980
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001981\section{Differences Between \UNIX{} and Windows
1982 \label{dynamic-linking}}
1983\sectionauthor{Chris Phoenix}{cphoenix@best.com}
1984
1985
1986\UNIX{} and Windows use completely different paradigms for run-time
1987loading of code. Before you try to build a module that can be
1988dynamically loaded, be aware of how your system works.
1989
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +00001990In \UNIX{}, a shared object (\file{.so}) file contains code to be used by the
Fred Drake33698f81999-02-16 23:06:32 +00001991program, and also the names of functions and data that it expects to
1992find in the program. When the file is joined to the program, all
1993references to those functions and data in the file's code are changed
1994to point to the actual locations in the program where the functions
1995and data are placed in memory. This is basically a link operation.
1996
1997In Windows, a dynamic-link library (\file{.dll}) file has no dangling
1998references. Instead, an access to functions or data goes through a
1999lookup table. So the DLL code does not have to be fixed up at runtime
2000to refer to the program's memory; instead, the code already uses the
2001DLL's lookup table, and the lookup table is modified at runtime to
2002point to the functions and data.
2003
2004In \UNIX{}, there is only one type of library file (\file{.a}) which
2005contains code from several object files (\file{.o}). During the link
2006step to create a shared object file (\file{.so}), the linker may find
2007that it doesn't know where an identifier is defined. The linker will
2008look for it in the object files in the libraries; if it finds it, it
2009will include all the code from that object file.
2010
2011In Windows, there are two types of library, a static library and an
2012import library (both called \file{.lib}). A static library is like a
2013\UNIX{} \file{.a} file; it contains code to be included as necessary.
2014An import library is basically used only to reassure the linker that a
2015certain identifier is legal, and will be present in the program when
2016the DLL is loaded. So the linker uses the information from the
2017import library to build the lookup table for using identifiers that
2018are not included in the DLL. When an application or a DLL is linked,
2019an import library may be generated, which will need to be used for all
2020future DLLs that depend on the symbols in the application or DLL.
2021
2022Suppose you are building two dynamic-load modules, B and C, which should
2023share another block of code A. On \UNIX{}, you would \emph{not} pass
2024\file{A.a} to the linker for \file{B.so} and \file{C.so}; that would
2025cause it to be included twice, so that B and C would each have their
2026own copy. In Windows, building \file{A.dll} will also build
2027\file{A.lib}. You \emph{do} pass \file{A.lib} to the linker for B and
2028C. \file{A.lib} does not contain code; it just contains information
2029which will be used at runtime to access A's code.
2030
2031In Windows, using an import library is sort of like using \samp{import
2032spam}; it gives you access to spam's names, but does not create a
2033separate copy. On \UNIX{}, linking with a library is more like
2034\samp{from spam import *}; it does create a separate copy.
2035
2036
2037\section{Using DLLs in Practice \label{win-dlls}}
2038\sectionauthor{Chris Phoenix}{cphoenix@best.com}
2039
2040Windows Python is built in Microsoft Visual \Cpp{}; using other
2041compilers may or may not work (though Borland seems to). The rest of
2042this section is MSV\Cpp{} specific.
2043
2044When creating DLLs in Windows, you must pass \file{python15.lib} to
2045the linker. To build two DLLs, spam and ni (which uses C functions
2046found in spam), you could use these commands:
2047
2048\begin{verbatim}
2049cl /LD /I/python/include spam.c ../libs/python15.lib
2050cl /LD /I/python/include ni.c spam.lib ../libs/python15.lib
2051\end{verbatim}
2052
2053The first command created three files: \file{spam.obj},
2054\file{spam.dll} and \file{spam.lib}. \file{Spam.dll} does not contain
2055any Python functions (such as \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()}), but it
2056does know how to find the Python code thanks to \file{python15.lib}.
2057
2058The second command created \file{ni.dll} (and \file{.obj} and
2059\file{.lib}), which knows how to find the necessary functions from
2060spam, and also from the Python executable.
2061
2062Not every identifier is exported to the lookup table. If you want any
2063other modules (including Python) to be able to see your identifiers,
2064you have to say \samp{_declspec(dllexport)}, as in \samp{void
2065_declspec(dllexport) initspam(void)} or \samp{PyObject
2066_declspec(dllexport) *NiGetSpamData(void)}.
2067
2068Developer Studio will throw in a lot of import libraries that you do
2069not really need, adding about 100K to your executable. To get rid of
2070them, use the Project Settings dialog, Link tab, to specify
2071\emph{ignore default libraries}. Add the correct
2072\file{msvcrt\var{xx}.lib} to the list of libraries.
2073
2074
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00002075\chapter{Embedding Python in Another Application
2076 \label{embedding}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002077
2078Embedding Python is similar to extending it, but not quite. The
2079difference is that when you extend Python, the main program of the
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00002080application is still the Python interpreter, while if you embed
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +00002081Python, the main program may have nothing to do with Python ---
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002082instead, some parts of the application occasionally call the Python
2083interpreter to run some Python code.
2084
2085So if you are embedding Python, you are providing your own main
2086program. One of the things this main program has to do is initialize
2087the Python interpreter. At the very least, you have to call the
Fred Drake54fd8452000-04-03 04:54:28 +00002088function \cfunction{Py_Initialize()} (on MacOS, call
2089\cfunction{PyMac_Initialize()} instead). There are optional calls to
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00002090pass command line arguments to Python. Then later you can call the
2091interpreter from any part of the application.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002092
2093There are several different ways to call the interpreter: you can pass
Fred Draked7bb3031998-03-03 17:52:07 +00002094a string containing Python statements to
2095\cfunction{PyRun_SimpleString()}, or you can pass a stdio file pointer
2096and a file name (for identification in error messages only) to
2097\cfunction{PyRun_SimpleFile()}. You can also call the lower-level
2098operations described in the previous chapters to construct and use
2099Python objects.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002100
2101A simple demo of embedding Python can be found in the directory
Fred Drake295fb431999-02-16 17:29:42 +00002102\file{Demo/embed/} of the source distribution.
Guido van Rossumdb65a6c1993-11-05 17:11:16 +00002103
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002104
Fred Drake5e8aa541998-11-16 18:34:07 +00002105\section{Embedding Python in \Cpp{}
2106 \label{embeddingInCplusplus}}
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002107
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00002108It is also possible to embed Python in a \Cpp{} program; precisely how this
2109is done will depend on the details of the \Cpp{} system used; in general you
2110will need to write the main program in \Cpp{}, and use the \Cpp{} compiler
2111to compile and link your program. There is no need to recompile Python
2112itself using \Cpp{}.
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002113
Fred Drake1c258032000-09-08 22:54:53 +00002114
2115\section{Linking Requirements
2116 \label{link-reqs}}
2117
2118While the \program{configure} script shipped with the Python sources
2119will correctly build Python to export the symbols needed by
2120dynamically linked extensions, this is not automatically inherited by
2121applications which embed the Python library statically, at least on
2122\UNIX. This is an issue when the application is linked to the static
2123runtime library (\file{libpython.a}) and needs to load dynamic
2124extensions (implemented as \file{.so} files).
2125
2126The problem is that some entry points are defined by the Python
2127runtime solely for extension modules to use. If the embedding
2128application does not use any of these entry points, some linkers will
2129not include those entries in the symbol table of the finished
2130executable. Some additional options are needed to inform the linker
2131not to remove these symbols.
2132
2133Determining the right options to use for any given platform can be
2134quite difficult, but fortunately the Python configuration already has
2135those values. To retrieve them from an installed Python interpreter,
2136start an interactive interpreter and have a short session like this:
2137
2138\begin{verbatim}
2139>>> import distutils.sysconfig
2140>>> distutils.sysconfig.LINKFORSHARED
2141'-Xlinker -export-dynamic'
2142\end{verbatim}
2143\refstmodindex{distutils.sysconfig}
2144
2145The contents of the string presented will be the options that should
2146be used. If the string is empty, there's no need to add any
2147additional options. The \constant{LINKFORSHARED} definition
2148corresponds to the variable of the same name in Python's top-level
2149\file{Makefile}.
2150
Guido van Rossum7a2dba21993-11-05 14:45:11 +00002151\end{document}