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							215 lines
						
					
					
						
							9.6 KiB
						
					
					
				
								Frequently asked questions
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								##########################
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								"ImportError: dynamic module does not define init function"
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								===========================================================
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								1. Make sure that the name specified in ``pybind::module`` and
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								   ``PYBIND11_PLUGIN`` is consistent and identical to the filename of the
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								   extension library. The latter should not contain any extra prefixes (e.g.
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								   ``test.so`` instead of ``libtest.so``).
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								2. If the above did not fix your issue, then you are likely using an
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								   incompatible version of Python (for instance, the extension library was
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								   compiled against Python 2, while the interpreter is running on top of some
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								   version of Python 3, or vice versa)
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								"Symbol not found: ``__Py_ZeroStruct`` / ``_PyInstanceMethod_Type``"
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								========================================================================
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								See item 2 of the first answer.
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								The Python interpreter immediately crashes when importing my module
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								===================================================================
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								See item 2 of the first answer.
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								CMake doesn't detect the right Python version, or it finds mismatched interpreter and library versions
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								======================================================================================================
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								The Python detection logic of CMake is flawed and can sometimes fail to find
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								the desired Python version, or it chooses mismatched interpreter and library
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								versions. A longer discussion is available on the pybind11 issue tracker
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								[#f1]_, though this is ultimately not a pybind11 issue.
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								To force the build system to choose a particular version, delete CMakeCache.txt
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								and then invoke CMake as follows:
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								.. code-block:: bash
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								    cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE:FILEPATH=<...> \
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								          -DPYTHON_LIBRARY:FILEPATH=<...>  \
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								          -DPYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR:PATH=<...> .
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								.. [#f1] http://github.com/pybind/pybind11/issues/99
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								Limitations involving reference arguments
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								=========================================
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								In C++, it's fairly common to pass arguments using mutable references or
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								mutable pointers, which allows both read and write access to the value
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								supplied by the caller. This is sometimes done for efficiency reasons, or to
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								realize functions that have multiple return values. Here are two very basic
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								examples:
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								.. code-block:: cpp
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								    void increment(int &i) { i++; }
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								    void increment_ptr(int *i) { (*i)++; }
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								In Python, all arguments are passed by reference, so there is no general
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								issue in binding such code from Python.
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								However, certain basic Python types (like ``str``, ``int``, ``bool``,
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								``float``, etc.) are **immutable**. This means that the following attempt
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								to port the function to Python doesn't have the same effect on the value
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								provided by the caller -- in fact, it does nothing at all.
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								.. code-block:: python
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								    def increment(i):
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								        i += 1 # nope..
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								pybind11 is also affected by such language-level conventions, which means that
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								binding ``increment`` or ``increment_ptr`` will also create Python functions
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								that don't modify their arguments.
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								Although inconvenient, one workaround is to encapsulate the immutable types in
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								a custom type that does allow modifications.
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								An other alternative involves binding a small wrapper lambda function that
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								returns a tuple with all output arguments (see the remainder of the
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								documentation for examples on binding lambda functions). An example:
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								.. code-block:: cpp
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								    int foo(int &i) { i++; return 123; }
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								and the binding code
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								.. code-block:: cpp
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								   m.def("foo", [](int i) { int rv = foo(i); return std::make_tuple(rv, i); });
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								How can I reduce the build time?
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								================================
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								It's good practice to split binding code over multiple files, as is done in
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								the included file :file:`example/example.cpp`.
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								.. code-block:: cpp
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								    void init_ex1(py::module &);
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								    void init_ex2(py::module &);
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								    /* ... */
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								    PYBIND11_PLUGIN(example) {
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								        py::module m("example", "pybind example plugin");
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								        init_ex1(m);
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								        init_ex2(m);
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								        /* ... */
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								        return m.ptr();
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								    }
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								The various ``init_ex`` functions should be contained in separate files that
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								can be compiled independently from another. Following this approach will
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								1. reduce memory requirements per compilation unit.
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								2. enable parallel builds (if desired).
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								3. allow for faster incremental builds. For instance, when a single class
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								   definiton is changed, only a subset of the binding code will generally need
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								   to be recompiled.
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								How can I create smaller binaries?
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								==================================
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								To do its job, pybind11 extensively relies on a programming technique known as
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								*template metaprogramming*, which is a way of performing computation at compile
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								time using type information. Template metaprogamming usually instantiates code
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								involving significant numbers of deeply nested types that are either completely
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								removed or reduced to just a few instrutions during the compiler's optimization
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								phase. However, due to the nested nature of these types, the resulting symbol
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								names in the compiled extension library can be extremely long. For instance,
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								the included test suite contains the following symbol:
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								.. only:: html
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								    .. code-block:: none
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								        __ZN8pybind1112cpp_functionC1Iv8Example2JRNSt3__16vectorINS3_12basic_stringIwNS3_11char_traitsIwEENS3_9allocatorIwEEEENS8_ISA_EEEEEJNS_4nameENS_7siblingENS_9is_methodEA28_cEEEMT0_FT_DpT1_EDpRKT2_
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								.. only:: not html
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								    .. code-block:: cpp
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								        __ZN8pybind1112cpp_functionC1Iv8Example2JRNSt3__16vectorINS3_12basic_stringIwNS3_11char_traitsIwEENS3_9allocatorIwEEEENS8_ISA_EEEEEJNS_4nameENS_7siblingENS_9is_methodEA28_cEEEMT0_FT_DpT1_EDpRKT2_
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								which is the mangled form of the following function type:
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								.. code-block:: cpp
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								    pybind11::cpp_function::cpp_function<void, Example2, std::__1::vector<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> >, std::__1::allocator<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> > > >&, pybind11::name, pybind11::sibling, pybind11::is_method, char [28]>(void (Example2::*)(std::__1::vector<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> >, std::__1::allocator<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> > > >&), pybind11::name const&, pybind11::sibling const&, pybind11::is_method const&, char const (&) [28])
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								The memory needed to store just the mangled name of this function (196 bytes)
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								is larger than the actual piece of code (111 bytes) it represents! On the other
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								hand, it's silly to even give this function a name -- after all, it's just a
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								tiny cog in a bigger piece of machinery that is not exposed to the outside
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								world. So we'll generally only want to export symbols for those functions which
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								are actually called from the outside.
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								This can be achieved by specifying the parameter ``-fvisibility=hidden`` to GCC
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								and Clang, which sets the default symbol visibility to *hidden*. It's best to
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								do this only for release builds, since the symbol names can be helpful in
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								debugging sessions. On Visual Studio, symbols are already hidden by default, so
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								nothing needs to be done there. Needless to say, this has a tremendous impact
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								on the final binary size of the resulting extension library.
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								Another aspect that can require a fair bit of code are function signature
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								descriptions. pybind11 automatically generates human-readable function
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								signatures for docstrings, e.g.:
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								.. code-block:: none
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								     |  __init__(...)
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								     |      __init__(*args, **kwargs)
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								     |      Overloaded function.
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								     |      1. __init__(example.Example1) -> NoneType
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								     |
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								     |      Docstring for overload #1 goes here
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								     |      2. __init__(example.Example1, int) -> NoneType
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								     |
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								     |      Docstring for overload #2 goes here
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								     |      3. __init__(example.Example1, example.Example1) -> NoneType
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								     |
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								     |      Docstring for overload #3 goes here
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								In C++11 mode, these are generated at run time using string concatenation,
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								which can amount to 10-20% of the size of the resulting binary. If you can,
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								enable C++14 language features (using ``-std=c++14`` for GCC/Clang), in which
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								case signatures are efficiently pre-generated at compile time. Unfortunately,
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								Visual Studio's C++14 support (``constexpr``) is not good enough as of April
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								2016, so it always uses the more expensive run-time approach.
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								Working with ancient Visual Studio 2009 builds on Windows
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								=========================================================
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								The official Windows distributions of Python are compiled using truly
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								ancient versions of Visual Studio that lack good C++11 support. Some users
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								implicitly assume that it would be impossible to load a plugin built with
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								Visual Studio 2015 into a Python distribution that was compiled using Visual
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								Studio 2009. However, no such issue exists: it's perfectly legitimate to
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								interface DLLs that are built with different compilers and/or C libraries.
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								Common gotchas to watch out for involve not ``free()``-ing memory region
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								that that were ``malloc()``-ed in another shared library, using data
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								structures with incompatible ABIs, and so on. pybind11 is very careful not
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								to make these types of mistakes.
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