blob: cef0d5942fc6ba50bb816c4409a2fd09517dc399 [file] [log] [blame]
Ivan Smirnov5cbfda52017-08-30 20:58:43 +01001.. _compiling:
2
Wenzel Jakob4a48afb2016-03-09 21:31:21 +01003Build systems
4#############
5
6Building with setuptools
7========================
8
9For projects on PyPI, building with setuptools is the way to go. Sylvain Corlay
10has kindly provided an example project which shows how to set up everything,
11including automatic generation of documentation using Sphinx. Please refer to
Wenzel Jakobca8dc082016-06-03 14:24:17 +020012the [python_example]_ repository.
Wenzel Jakob4a48afb2016-03-09 21:31:21 +010013
Wenzel Jakobca8dc082016-06-03 14:24:17 +020014.. [python_example] https://github.com/pybind/python_example
Wenzel Jakob4a48afb2016-03-09 21:31:21 +010015
Wenzel Jakoba439cca2016-05-17 10:47:52 +020016Building with cppimport
17========================
18
Dean Moldovan8665ee82017-08-17 15:01:43 +020019[cppimport]_ is a small Python import hook that determines whether there is a C++
20source file whose name matches the requested module. If there is, the file is
21compiled as a Python extension using pybind11 and placed in the same folder as
22the C++ source file. Python is then able to find the module and load it.
Wenzel Jakoba439cca2016-05-17 10:47:52 +020023
24.. [cppimport] https://github.com/tbenthompson/cppimport
25
Wenzel Jakob28f98aa2015-10-13 02:57:16 +020026.. _cmake:
27
28Building with CMake
29===================
30
Wenzel Jakobfe342412016-09-06 13:02:29 +090031For C++ codebases that have an existing CMake-based build system, a Python
Dean Moldovan24ddf4b2016-05-27 00:11:52 +020032extension module can be created with just a few lines of code:
Wenzel Jakob28f98aa2015-10-13 02:57:16 +020033
34.. code-block:: cmake
35
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -040036 cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.7)
Wenzel Jakob28f98aa2015-10-13 02:57:16 +020037 project(example)
38
Dean Moldovan24ddf4b2016-05-27 00:11:52 +020039 add_subdirectory(pybind11)
40 pybind11_add_module(example example.cpp)
Wenzel Jakobf64feaf2016-04-28 14:33:45 +020041
Wenzel Jakobfe342412016-09-06 13:02:29 +090042This assumes that the pybind11 repository is located in a subdirectory named
Dean Moldovan24ddf4b2016-05-27 00:11:52 +020043:file:`pybind11` and that the code is located in a file named :file:`example.cpp`.
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +010044The CMake command ``add_subdirectory`` will import the pybind11 project which
45provides the ``pybind11_add_module`` function. It will take care of all the
46details needed to build a Python extension module on any platform.
Wenzel Jakob28f98aa2015-10-13 02:57:16 +020047
Dean Moldovan24ddf4b2016-05-27 00:11:52 +020048A working sample project, including a way to invoke CMake from :file:`setup.py` for
49PyPI integration, can be found in the [cmake_example]_ repository.
Wenzel Jakobcaa9d442016-01-17 22:36:34 +010050
Wenzel Jakobaa79af02016-06-03 12:23:24 +020051.. [cmake_example] https://github.com/pybind/cmake_example
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -050052
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +010053pybind11_add_module
54-------------------
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -050055
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +010056To ease the creation of Python extension modules, pybind11 provides a CMake
57function with the following signature:
58
59.. code-block:: cmake
60
61 pybind11_add_module(<name> [MODULE | SHARED] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL]
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -040062 [NO_EXTRAS] [THIN_LTO] source1 [source2 ...])
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +010063
64This function behaves very much like CMake's builtin ``add_library`` (in fact,
65it's a wrapper function around that command). It will add a library target
66called ``<name>`` to be built from the listed source files. In addition, it
67will take care of all the Python-specific compiler and linker flags as well
68as the OS- and Python-version-specific file extension. The produced target
69``<name>`` can be further manipulated with regular CMake commands.
70
71``MODULE`` or ``SHARED`` may be given to specify the type of library. If no
72type is given, ``MODULE`` is used by default which ensures the creation of a
73Python-exclusive module. Specifying ``SHARED`` will create a more traditional
74dynamic library which can also be linked from elsewhere. ``EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL``
75removes this target from the default build (see CMake docs for details).
76
77Since pybind11 is a template library, ``pybind11_add_module`` adds compiler
78flags to ensure high quality code generation without bloat arising from long
Jason Rhinelander97aa54f2017-08-10 12:08:42 -040079symbol names and duplication of code in different translation units. It
80sets default visibility to *hidden*, which is required for some pybind11
81features and functionality when attempting to load multiple pybind11 modules
82compiled under different pybind11 versions. It also adds additional flags
83enabling LTO (Link Time Optimization) and strip unneeded symbols. See the
84:ref:`FAQ entry <faq:symhidden>` for a more detailed explanation. These
85latter optimizations are never applied in ``Debug`` mode. If ``NO_EXTRAS`` is
86given, they will always be disabled, even in ``Release`` mode. However, this
87will result in code bloat and is generally not recommended.
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +010088
89As stated above, LTO is enabled by default. Some newer compilers also support
90different flavors of LTO such as `ThinLTO`_. Setting ``THIN_LTO`` will cause
91the function to prefer this flavor if available. The function falls back to
92regular LTO if ``-flto=thin`` is not available.
93
94.. _ThinLTO: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThinLTO.html
95
96Configuration variables
97-----------------------
98
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -040099By default, pybind11 will compile modules with the compiler default or the
100minimum standard required by PyBind11, whichever is higher. You can set the
101standard explicitly with
102`CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD <https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD.html>`_:
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100103
104.. code-block:: cmake
105
Henry Schreiner1b92cd12020-07-29 15:02:53 -0400106 set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14) # or 11, 14, 17, 20
107 set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON) # optional, ensure standard is supported
108 set(CMAKE_CXX_EXTENSIONS OFF) # optional, keep compiler extensionsn off
Jason Rhinelander77710ff2017-05-09 14:37:48 -0400109
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100110
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400111The variables can also be set when calling CMake from the command line using
112the ``-D<variable>=<value>`` flag. You can also manually set ``CXX_STANDARD``
113on a target or use ``target_compile_features`` on your targets - anything that
114CMake supports.
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100115
116The target Python version can be selected by setting ``PYBIND11_PYTHON_VERSION``
117or an exact Python installation can be specified with ``PYTHON_EXECUTABLE``.
118For example:
119
120.. code-block:: bash
121
122 cmake -DPYBIND11_PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 ..
Henry Schreiner1b92cd12020-07-29 15:02:53 -0400123
124 # Another method:
125 cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/path/to/python ..
126
127 # You will often see this idiom:
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400128 cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=$(python3 -c "import sys; print(sys.executable)") ..
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100129
130find_package vs. add_subdirectory
131---------------------------------
132
133For CMake-based projects that don't include the pybind11 repository internally,
134an external installation can be detected through ``find_package(pybind11)``.
135See the `Config file`_ docstring for details of relevant CMake variables.
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500136
137.. code-block:: cmake
138
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400139 cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.7)
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500140 project(example)
141
142 find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED)
143 pybind11_add_module(example example.cpp)
144
nstelzenc2514342019-06-10 16:35:36 +0200145Note that ``find_package(pybind11)`` will only work correctly if pybind11
146has been correctly installed on the system, e. g. after downloading or cloning
147the pybind11 repository :
148
149.. code-block:: bash
150
Henry Schreiner1b92cd12020-07-29 15:02:53 -0400151 # Classic CMake
nstelzenc2514342019-06-10 16:35:36 +0200152 cd pybind11
153 mkdir build
154 cd build
155 cmake ..
156 make install
157
Henry Schreiner1b92cd12020-07-29 15:02:53 -0400158 # CMake 3.15+
159 cd pybind11
160 cmake -S . -B build
161 cmake --build build -j 2 # Build on 2 cores
162 cmake --install build
163
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100164Once detected, the aforementioned ``pybind11_add_module`` can be employed as
165before. The function usage and configuration variables are identical no matter
166if pybind11 is added as a subdirectory or found as an installed package. You
167can refer to the same [cmake_example]_ repository for a full sample project
168-- just swap out ``add_subdirectory`` for ``find_package``.
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500169
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100170.. _Config file: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/blob/master/tools/pybind11Config.cmake.in
171
172Advanced: interface library target
173----------------------------------
174
175When using a version of CMake greater than 3.0, pybind11 can additionally
Dean Moldovan71e8a792016-12-17 21:38:57 +0100176be used as a special *interface library* . The target ``pybind11::module``
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100177is available with pybind11 headers, Python headers and libraries as needed,
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400178and C++ compile features attached. This target is suitable for linking
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100179to an independently constructed (through ``add_library``, not
180``pybind11_add_module``) target in the consuming project.
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500181
182.. code-block:: cmake
183
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400184 cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.7)
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500185 project(example)
186
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100187 find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED) # or add_subdirectory(pybind11)
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500188
Dean Moldovan0cbec5c2016-12-16 22:58:37 +0100189 add_library(example MODULE main.cpp)
Dean Moldovan71e8a792016-12-17 21:38:57 +0100190 target_link_libraries(example PRIVATE pybind11::module)
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500191 set_target_properties(example PROPERTIES PREFIX "${PYTHON_MODULE_PREFIX}"
192 SUFFIX "${PYTHON_MODULE_EXTENSION}")
193
194.. warning::
195
196 Since pybind11 is a metatemplate library, it is crucial that certain
197 compiler flags are provided to ensure high quality code generation. In
198 contrast to the ``pybind11_add_module()`` command, the CMake interface
199 library only provides the *minimal* set of parameters to ensure that the
200 code using pybind11 compiles, but it does **not** pass these extra compiler
201 flags (i.e. this is up to you).
202
203 These include Link Time Optimization (``-flto`` on GCC/Clang/ICPC, ``/GL``
Jason Rhinelander97aa54f2017-08-10 12:08:42 -0400204 and ``/LTCG`` on Visual Studio) and .OBJ files with many sections on Visual
205 Studio (``/bigobj``). The :ref:`FAQ <faq:symhidden>` contains an
Lori A. Burns5cafc992016-12-13 10:55:38 -0500206 explanation on why these are needed.
Wenzel Jakobf3de2d52016-12-26 13:34:28 +0100207
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400208 If you want to add these in yourself, you can use:
209
210 .. code-block:: cmake
211
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400212 set(CMAKE_CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET hidden)
Henry Schreiner1b92cd12020-07-29 15:02:53 -0400213 set(CMAKE_VISIBILITY_INLINES_HIDDEN ON)
214 set(CMAKE_INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION ON) # CMake 3.9+ required
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400215
Henry Schreiner1b92cd12020-07-29 15:02:53 -0400216 or set the corresponding property (without the ``CMAKE_``) on the targets
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400217 manually.
218
Dean Moldovan6d2411f2017-04-22 23:24:13 +0200219Embedding the Python interpreter
220--------------------------------
221
222In addition to extension modules, pybind11 also supports embedding Python into
223a C++ executable or library. In CMake, simply link with the ``pybind11::embed``
224target. It provides everything needed to get the interpreter running. The Python
225headers and libraries are attached to the target. Unlike ``pybind11::module``,
226there is no need to manually set any additional properties here. For more
227information about usage in C++, see :doc:`/advanced/embedding`.
228
229.. code-block:: cmake
230
Henry Schreiner6ec17752020-07-28 00:43:12 -0400231 cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.7)
Dean Moldovan6d2411f2017-04-22 23:24:13 +0200232 project(example)
233
234 find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED) # or add_subdirectory(pybind11)
235
Dean Moldovan8f6c1292017-05-31 13:48:39 +0200236 add_executable(example main.cpp)
Dean Moldovan6d2411f2017-04-22 23:24:13 +0200237 target_link_libraries(example PRIVATE pybind11::embed)
238
Ivan Smirnov5cbfda52017-08-30 20:58:43 +0100239.. _building_manually:
240
241Building manually
242=================
243
244pybind11 is a header-only library, hence it is not necessary to link against
245any special libraries and there are no intermediate (magic) translation steps.
246
247On Linux, you can compile an example such as the one given in
248:ref:`simple_example` using the following command:
249
250.. code-block:: bash
251
252 $ c++ -O3 -Wall -shared -std=c++11 -fPIC `python3 -m pybind11 --includes` example.cpp -o example`python3-config --extension-suffix`
253
254The flags given here assume that you're using Python 3. For Python 2, just
255change the executable appropriately (to ``python`` or ``python2``).
256
257The ``python3 -m pybind11 --includes`` command fetches the include paths for
258both pybind11 and Python headers. This assumes that pybind11 has been installed
259using ``pip`` or ``conda``. If it hasn't, you can also manually specify
260``-I <path-to-pybind11>/include`` together with the Python includes path
261``python3-config --includes``.
262
263Note that Python 2.7 modules don't use a special suffix, so you should simply
264use ``example.so`` instead of ``example`python3-config --extension-suffix```.
265Besides, the ``--extension-suffix`` option may or may not be available, depending
266on the distribution; in the latter case, the module extension can be manually
267set to ``.so``.
268
269On Mac OS: the build command is almost the same but it also requires passing
270the ``-undefined dynamic_lookup`` flag so as to ignore missing symbols when
271building the module:
272
273.. code-block:: bash
274
275 $ c++ -O3 -Wall -shared -std=c++11 -undefined dynamic_lookup `python3 -m pybind11 --includes` example.cpp -o example`python3-config --extension-suffix`
276
277In general, it is advisable to include several additional build parameters
278that can considerably reduce the size of the created binary. Refer to section
279:ref:`cmake` for a detailed example of a suitable cross-platform CMake-based
280build system that works on all platforms including Windows.
281
282.. note::
283
284 On Linux and macOS, it's better to (intentionally) not link against
285 ``libpython``. The symbols will be resolved when the extension library
286 is loaded into a Python binary. This is preferable because you might
287 have several different installations of a given Python version (e.g. the
288 system-provided Python, and one that ships with a piece of commercial
289 software). In this way, the plugin will work with both versions, instead
290 of possibly importing a second Python library into a process that already
291 contains one (which will lead to a segfault).
Dean Moldovan6d2411f2017-04-22 23:24:13 +0200292
Wenzel Jakobf3de2d52016-12-26 13:34:28 +0100293Generating binding code automatically
294=====================================
295
296The ``Binder`` project is a tool for automatic generation of pybind11 binding
297code by introspecting existing C++ codebases using LLVM/Clang. See the
298[binder]_ documentation for details.
299
300.. [binder] http://cppbinder.readthedocs.io/en/latest/about.html
Dustin Spicuzza2c4cd842019-11-24 02:36:48 -0500301
302[AutoWIG]_ is a Python library that wraps automatically compiled libraries into
303high-level languages. It parses C++ code using LLVM/Clang technologies and
304generates the wrappers using the Mako templating engine. The approach is automatic,
305extensible, and applies to very complex C++ libraries, composed of thousands of
306classes or incorporating modern meta-programming constructs.
307
308.. [AutoWIG] https://github.com/StatisKit/AutoWIG