Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How do you extend python with C++?

Tags:

c++

python

I've successfully extended python with C, thanks to this handy skeleton module. But I can't find one for C++, and I have circular dependency trouble when trying to fix the errors that C++ gives when I compile this skeleton module.

How do you extend Python with C++?

I'd rather not depend on Boost (or SWIP or other libraries) if I don't have to. Dependencies are a pain in the butt. Best case scenario, I find a skeleton file that already compiles with C++.

Here's the edited skeleton I've made for C++:

#include <Python.h>

#include "Flp.h"

static PyObject * ErrorObject;

typedef struct {
    PyObject_HEAD
    PyObject * x_attr; // attributes dictionary
} FlpObject;

static void Flp_dealloc(FlpObject * self);
static PyObject * Flp_getattr(FlpObject * self, char * name);
static int Flp_setattr(FlpObject * self, char * name, PyObject * v);
DL_EXPORT(void) initflp();

static PyTypeObject Flp_Type = {
    /* The ob_type field must be initialized in the module init function
     * to be portable to Windows without using C++. */
    PyObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL)
    0,          /*ob_size*/
    "Flp",          /*tp_name*/
    sizeof(FlpObject),  /*tp_basicsize*/
    0,          /*tp_itemsize*/
    /* methods */
    (destructor)Flp_dealloc, /*tp_dealloc*/
    0,          /*tp_print*/
    (getattrfunc)Flp_getattr, /*tp_getattr*/
    (setattrfunc)Flp_setattr, /*tp_setattr*/
    0,          /*tp_compare*/
    0,          /*tp_repr*/
    0,          /*tp_as_number*/
    0,          /*tp_as_sequence*/
    0,          /*tp_as_mapping*/
    0,          /*tp_hash*/
};

#define FlpObject_Check(v) ((v)->ob_type == &Flp_Type)

static FlpObject * newFlpObject(PyObject * arg)
{
    FlpObject * self;
    self = PyObject_NEW(FlpObject, &Flp_Type);
    if (self == NULL)
        return NULL;
    self->x_attr = NULL;
    return self;
}

// Flp methods

static void Flp_dealloc(FlpObject * self)
{
    Py_XDECREF(self->x_attr);
    PyMem_DEL(self);
}

static PyObject * Flp_demo(FlpObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    if (! PyArg_ParseTuple(args, ""))
        return NULL;
    Py_INCREF(Py_None);
    return Py_None;
}

static PyMethodDef Flp_methods[] = {
    {"demo",    (PyCFunction)Flp_demo,  1},
    {NULL,      NULL} // sentinel
};

static PyObject * Flp_getattr(FlpObject * self, char * name)
{
    if (self->x_attr != NULL) {
        PyObject * v = PyDict_GetItemString(self->x_attr, name);
        if (v != NULL) {
            Py_INCREF(v);
            return v;
        }
    }
    return Py_FindMethod(Flp_methods, (PyObject *)self, name);
}

static int Flp_setattr(FlpObject * self, char * name, PyObject * v)
{
    if (self->x_attr == NULL) {
        self->x_attr = PyDict_New();
        if (self->x_attr == NULL)
            return -1;
    }
    if (v == NULL) {
        int rv = PyDict_DelItemString(self->x_attr, name);
        if (rv < 0)
            PyErr_SetString(PyExc_AttributeError,
                    "delete non-existing Flp attribute");
        return rv;
    }
    else
        return PyDict_SetItemString(self->x_attr, name, v);
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------- */

/* Function of two integers returning integer */

static PyObject * flp_foo(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    long i, j;
    long res;
    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "ll", &i, &j))
        return NULL;
    res = i+j; /* flpX Do something here */
    return PyInt_FromLong(res);
}


/* Function of no arguments returning new Flp object */

static PyObject * flp_new(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    FlpObject *rv;

    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, ""))
        return NULL;
    rv = newFlpObject(args);
    if ( rv == NULL )
        return NULL;
    return (PyObject *)rv;
}

/* Example with subtle bug from extensions manual ("Thin Ice"). */

static PyObject * flp_bug(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    PyObject *list, *item;

    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O", &list))
        return NULL;

    item = PyList_GetItem(list, 0);
    /* Py_INCREF(item); */
    PyList_SetItem(list, 1, PyInt_FromLong(0L));
    PyObject_Print(item, stdout, 0);
    printf("\n");
    /* Py_DECREF(item); */

    Py_INCREF(Py_None);
    return Py_None;
}

/* Test bad format character */

static PyObject * flp_roj(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    PyObject *a;
    long b;
    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O#", &a, &b))
        return NULL;
    Py_INCREF(Py_None);
    return Py_None;
}


/* List of functions defined in the module */

static PyMethodDef flp_methods[] = {
    {"roj",     flp_roj,     1},
    {"foo",     flp_foo,     1},
    {"new",     flp_new,     1},
    {"bug",     flp_bug,     1},
    {NULL,      NULL}       /* sentinel */
};


/* Initialization function for the module (*must* be called initflp) */

DL_EXPORT(void) initflp()
{
    PyObject *m, *d;

    /* Initialize the type of the new type object here; doing it here
     * is required for portability to Windows without requiring C++. */
    Flp_Type.ob_type = &PyType_Type;

    /* Create the module and add the functions */
    m = Py_InitModule("flp", flp_methods);

    /* Add some symbolic constants to the module */
    d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
    ErrorObject = PyErr_NewException("flp.error", NULL, NULL);
    PyDict_SetItemString(d, "error", ErrorObject);
}

This compiles fine for me, but when I test it:

$ python
Python 2.6.5 (r265:79063, Apr 16 2010, 13:57:41) 
[GCC 4.4.3] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import flp
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: dynamic module does not define init function (initflp)
>>> 
like image 669
andrewrk Avatar asked May 17 '10 08:05

andrewrk


People also ask

Can Python integrate with C?

Any code that you write using any compiled language like C, C++, or Java can be integrated or imported into another Python script. This code is considered as an "extension." A Python extension module is nothing more than a normal C library.

What are C extensions Python?

A CPython extension module is a module which can be imported and used from within Python which is written in another language. Extension modules are almost always written in C, and sometimes in C++, because CPython provides an API for working with Python objects targeted at C.

How do you call a Python script from C program?

Create the return value, Restore previous GIL state and return. A reference to an existing Python callable needs to be passed in, to use this function. To do that there are many ways like – simply writing C code to extract a symbol from an existing module or having a callable object passed into an extension module.


1 Answers

First of all, even though you don't want to introduce an additional dependency, I suggest you to have a look at PyCXX. Quoting its webpage:

CXX/Objects is a set of C++ facilities to make it easier to write Python extensions. The chief way in which PyCXX makes it easier to write Python extensions is that it greatly increases the probability that your program will not make a reference-counting error and will not have to continually check error returns from the Python C API. CXX/Objects integrates Python with C++ in these ways:

  • C++ exception handling is relied on to detect errors and clean up. In a complicated function this is often a tremendous problem when writing in C. With PyCXX, we let the compiler keep track of what objects need to be dereferenced when an error occurs.
  • The Standard Template Library (STL) and its many algorithms plug and play with Python containers such as lists and tuples.
  • The optional CXX/Extensions facility allows you to replace the clumsy C tables with objects and method calls that define your modules and extension objects.

I think PyCXX is licensed under the BSD license, which means that you can just as well include the whole source code of PyCXX in the distributed tarball of your extension if your extension will be released under a similar license.

If you really and absolutely don't want to depend on PyCXX or any other third-party library, I think you only have to wrap functions that will be called by the Python interpreter in extern "C" { and } to avoid name mangling.

Here's the corrected code:

#include <Python.h>

#include "Flp.h"

static PyObject * ErrorObject;

typedef struct {
    PyObject_HEAD
    PyObject * x_attr; // attributes dictionary
} FlpObject;

extern "C" {
    static void Flp_dealloc(FlpObject * self);
    static PyObject * Flp_getattr(FlpObject * self, char * name);
    static int Flp_setattr(FlpObject * self, char * name, PyObject * v);
    DL_EXPORT(void) initflp();
}

static PyTypeObject Flp_Type = {
    /* The ob_type field must be initialized in the module init function
     * to be portable to Windows without using C++. */
    PyObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL)
    0,          /*ob_size*/
    "Flp",          /*tp_name*/
    sizeof(FlpObject),  /*tp_basicsize*/
    0,          /*tp_itemsize*/
    /* methods */
    (destructor)Flp_dealloc, /*tp_dealloc*/
    0,          /*tp_print*/
    (getattrfunc)Flp_getattr, /*tp_getattr*/
    (setattrfunc)Flp_setattr, /*tp_setattr*/
    0,          /*tp_compare*/
    0,          /*tp_repr*/
    0,          /*tp_as_number*/
    0,          /*tp_as_sequence*/
    0,          /*tp_as_mapping*/
    0,          /*tp_hash*/
};

#define FlpObject_Check(v) ((v)->ob_type == &Flp_Type)

static FlpObject * newFlpObject(PyObject * arg)
{
    FlpObject * self;
    self = PyObject_NEW(FlpObject, &Flp_Type);
    if (self == NULL)
        return NULL;
    self->x_attr = NULL;
    return self;
}

// Flp methods

static void Flp_dealloc(FlpObject * self)
{
    Py_XDECREF(self->x_attr);
    PyMem_DEL(self);
}

static PyObject * Flp_demo(FlpObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    if (! PyArg_ParseTuple(args, ""))
        return NULL;
    Py_INCREF(Py_None);
    return Py_None;
}

static PyMethodDef Flp_methods[] = {
    {"demo",    (PyCFunction)Flp_demo,  1},
    {NULL,      NULL} // sentinel
};

static PyObject * Flp_getattr(FlpObject * self, char * name)
{
    if (self->x_attr != NULL) {
        PyObject * v = PyDict_GetItemString(self->x_attr, name);
        if (v != NULL) {
            Py_INCREF(v);
            return v;
        }
    }
    return Py_FindMethod(Flp_methods, (PyObject *)self, name);
}

static int Flp_setattr(FlpObject * self, char * name, PyObject * v)
{
    if (self->x_attr == NULL) {
        self->x_attr = PyDict_New();
        if (self->x_attr == NULL)
            return -1;
    }
    if (v == NULL) {
        int rv = PyDict_DelItemString(self->x_attr, name);
        if (rv < 0)
            PyErr_SetString(PyExc_AttributeError,
                    "delete non-existing Flp attribute");
        return rv;
    }
    else
        return PyDict_SetItemString(self->x_attr, name, v);
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------- */

/* Function of two integers returning integer */

static PyObject * flp_foo(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    long i, j;
    long res;
    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "ll", &i, &j))
        return NULL;
    res = i+j; /* flpX Do something here */
    return PyInt_FromLong(res);
}


/* Function of no arguments returning new Flp object */

static PyObject * flp_new(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    FlpObject *rv;
    
    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, ""))
        return NULL;
    rv = newFlpObject(args);
    if ( rv == NULL )
        return NULL;
    return (PyObject *)rv;
}

/* Example with subtle bug from extensions manual ("Thin Ice"). */

static PyObject * flp_bug(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    PyObject *list, *item;
    
    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O", &list))
        return NULL;
    
    item = PyList_GetItem(list, 0);
    /* Py_INCREF(item); */
    PyList_SetItem(list, 1, PyInt_FromLong(0L));
    PyObject_Print(item, stdout, 0);
    printf("\n");
    /* Py_DECREF(item); */
    
    Py_INCREF(Py_None);
    return Py_None;
}

/* Test bad format character */

static PyObject * flp_roj(PyObject * self, PyObject * args)
{
    PyObject *a;
    long b;
    if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O#", &a, &b))
        return NULL;
    Py_INCREF(Py_None);
    return Py_None;
}


/* List of functions defined in the module */

static PyMethodDef flp_methods[] = {
    {"roj",     flp_roj,     1},
    {"foo",     flp_foo,     1},
    {"new",     flp_new,     1},
    {"bug",     flp_bug,     1},
    {NULL,      NULL}       /* sentinel */
};


/* Initialization function for the module (*must* be called initflp) */

DL_EXPORT(void) initflp()
{
    PyObject *m, *d;

    /* Initialize the type of the new type object here; doing it here
     * is required for portability to Windows without requiring C++. */
    Flp_Type.ob_type = &PyType_Type;

    /* Create the module and add the functions */
    m = Py_InitModule("flp", flp_methods);

    /* Add some symbolic constants to the module */
    d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
    ErrorObject = PyErr_NewException("flp.error", NULL, NULL);
    PyDict_SetItemString(d, "error", ErrorObject);
}
like image 54
Tamás Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 05:10

Tamás