#![feature(specialization)] #![allow(clippy::missing_safety_doc)] // FIXME (#698) //! Rust bindings to the Python interpreter. //! //! Look at [the guide](https://pyo3.rs/) for a detailed introduction. //! //! # Ownership and Lifetimes //! //! Because all Python objects potentially have multiple owners, the concept of //! Rust mutability does not apply to Python objects. As a result, PyO3 allows //! mutating Python objects even if they are not stored in a mutable Rust //! variable. //! //! In Python, all objects are implicitly reference counted. The Python //! interpreter uses a global interpreter lock (GIL) to ensure thread-safety. //! Thus, we use `struct Python<'py>` as a token to indicate that //! a function can assume that the GIL is held. In Rust, we use different types //! to represent a reference to a Python object, depending on whether we know //! the GIL is held, and depending on whether we know the underlying type. See //! [the guide](https://pyo3.rs/master/types.html) for an explanation of //! the different Python object types. //! //! A `Python` instance is either obtained explicitly by acquiring the GIL, //! or implicitly by PyO3 when it generates the wrapper code for Rust functions //! and structs wrapped as Python functions and objects. //! //! # Error Handling //! //! The vast majority of operations in this library will return `PyResult<...>`. //! This is an alias for the type `Result<..., PyErr>`. //! //! A `PyErr` represents a Python exception. Errors within the `PyO3` library are //! also exposed as Python exceptions. //! //! # Example //! //! ## Using Rust from Python //! //! PyO3 can be used to generate a native Python module. //! //! **`Cargo.toml`** //! //! ```toml //! [package] //! name = "string-sum" //! version = "0.1.0" //! edition = "2018" //! //! [lib] //! name = "string_sum" //! crate-type = ["cdylib"] //! //! [dependencies.pyo3] //! version = "0.9.2" //! features = ["extension-module"] //! ``` //! //! **`src/lib.rs`** //! //! ```rust //! use pyo3::prelude::*; //! use pyo3::wrap_pyfunction; //! //! #[pyfunction] //! /// Formats the sum of two numbers as string. //! fn sum_as_string(a: usize, b: usize) -> PyResult { //! Ok((a + b).to_string()) //! } //! //! #[pymodule] //! /// A Python module implemented in Rust. //! fn string_sum(py: Python, m: &PyModule) -> PyResult<()> { //! m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(sum_as_string))?; //! //! Ok(()) //! } //! ``` //! //! On Windows and linux, you can build normally with `cargo build //! --release`. On macOS, you need to set additional linker arguments. One //! option is to compile with `cargo rustc --release -- -C link-arg=-undefined //! -C link-arg=dynamic_lookup`, the other is to create a `.cargo/config` with //! the following content: //! //! ```toml //! [target.x86_64-apple-darwin] //! rustflags = [ //! "-C", "link-arg=-undefined", //! "-C", "link-arg=dynamic_lookup", //! ] //! ``` //! //! While developing, you symlink (or copy) and rename the shared library from //! the target folder: On macOS, rename `libstring_sum.dylib` to //! `string_sum.so`, on Windows `libstring_sum.dll` to `string_sum.pyd` and on //! Linux `libstring_sum.so` to `string_sum.so`. Then open a Python shell in the //! same folder and you'll be able to `import string_sum`. //! //! To build, test and publish your crate as a Python module, you can use //! [maturin](https://github.com/PyO3/maturin) or //! [setuptools-rust](https://github.com/PyO3/setuptools-rust). You can find an //! example for setuptools-rust in [examples/word-count](examples/word-count), //! while maturin should work on your crate without any configuration. //! //! ## Using Python from Rust //! //! Add `pyo3` to your `Cargo.toml`: //! //! ```toml //! [dependencies] //! pyo3 = "0.9.2" //! ``` //! //! Example program displaying the value of `sys.version`: //! //! ```rust //! use pyo3::prelude::*; //! use pyo3::types::IntoPyDict; //! //! fn main() -> PyResult<()> { //! let gil = Python::acquire_gil(); //! let py = gil.python(); //! let sys = py.import("sys")?; //! let version: String = sys.get("version")?.extract()?; //! //! let locals = [("os", py.import("os")?)].into_py_dict(py); //! let code = "os.getenv('USER') or os.getenv('USERNAME') or 'Unknown'"; //! let user: String = py.eval(code, None, Some(&locals))?.extract()?; //! //! println!("Hello {}, I'm Python {}", user, version); //! Ok(()) //! } //! ``` pub use crate::callback::run_callback; pub use crate::class::*; pub use crate::conversion::{ AsPyPointer, FromPy, FromPyObject, FromPyPointer, IntoPy, IntoPyPointer, PyTryFrom, PyTryInto, ToBorrowedObject, ToPyObject, }; pub use crate::err::{PyDowncastError, PyErr, PyErrArguments, PyErrValue, PyResult}; pub use crate::gil::{GILGuard, GILPool}; pub use crate::instance::{AsPyRef, ManagedPyRef, Py, PyNativeType}; pub use crate::object::PyObject; pub use crate::objectprotocol::ObjectProtocol; pub use crate::pycell::{PyCell, PyRef, PyRefMut}; pub use crate::pyclass::PyClass; pub use crate::pyclass_init::PyClassInitializer; pub use crate::python::{prepare_freethreaded_python, Python}; pub use crate::type_object::{type_flags, PyTypeInfo}; // Since PyAny is as important as PyObject, we expose it to the top level. pub use crate::types::PyAny; // Re-exported for wrap_function #[doc(hidden)] pub use paste; // Re-exported for py_run #[doc(hidden)] pub use indoc; // Re-exported for pymethods #[doc(hidden)] pub use inventory; // Re-exported for the `__wrap` functions #[doc(hidden)] pub use libc; // Re-exported for py_run #[doc(hidden)] pub use unindent; pub mod buffer; #[doc(hidden)] pub mod callback; pub mod class; pub mod conversion; #[doc(hidden)] pub mod derive_utils; mod err; pub mod exceptions; /// Raw ffi declarations for the c interface of python #[allow(clippy::unknown_clippy_lints)] #[allow(clippy::missing_safety_doc)] pub mod ffi; pub mod freelist; mod gil; mod instance; #[macro_use] mod internal_tricks; pub mod marshal; mod object; mod objectprotocol; pub mod prelude; pub mod pycell; pub mod pyclass; pub mod pyclass_init; pub mod pyclass_slots; mod python; pub mod type_object; pub mod types; /// The proc macros, which are also part of the prelude. pub mod proc_macro { pub use pyo3cls::pymodule; /// The proc macro attributes pub use pyo3cls::{pyclass, pyfunction, pymethods, pyproto}; } /// Returns a function that takes a [Python] instance and returns a Python function. /// /// Use this together with `#[pyfunction]` and [types::PyModule::add_wrapped]. #[macro_export] macro_rules! wrap_pyfunction { ($function_name: ident) => {{ &pyo3::paste::expr! { [<__pyo3_get_function_ $function_name>] } }}; } /// Returns a function that takes a [Python] instance and returns a Python module. /// /// Use this together with `#[pymodule]` and [types::PyModule::add_wrapped]. #[macro_export] macro_rules! wrap_pymodule { ($module_name:ident) => {{ pyo3::paste::expr! { &|py| unsafe { pyo3::PyObject::from_owned_ptr(py, []()) } } }}; } /// A convenient macro to execute a Python code snippet, with some local variables set. /// /// # Example /// ``` /// use pyo3::{prelude::*, py_run, types::PyList}; /// let gil = Python::acquire_gil(); /// let py = gil.python(); /// let list = PyList::new(py, &[1, 2, 3]); /// py_run!(py, list, "assert list == [1, 2, 3]"); /// ``` /// /// You can use this macro to test pyfunctions or pyclasses quickly. /// /// # Example /// ``` /// use pyo3::{prelude::*, py_run, PyCell}; /// #[pyclass] /// #[derive(Debug)] /// struct Time { /// hour: u32, /// minute: u32, /// second: u32, /// } /// #[pymethods] /// impl Time { /// fn repl_japanese(&self) -> String { /// format!("{}時{}分{}秒", self.hour, self.minute, self.second) /// } /// #[getter] /// fn hour(&self) -> u32 { /// self.hour /// } /// fn as_tuple(&self) -> (u32, u32, u32) { /// (self.hour, self.minute, self.second) /// } /// } /// let gil = Python::acquire_gil(); /// let py = gil.python(); /// let time = PyCell::new(py, Time {hour: 8, minute: 43, second: 16}).unwrap(); /// let time_as_tuple = (8, 43, 16); /// py_run!(py, time time_as_tuple, r#" /// assert time.hour == 8 /// assert time.repl_japanese() == "8時43分16秒" /// assert time.as_tuple() == time_as_tuple /// "#); /// ``` /// /// **Note** /// Since this macro is intended to use for testing, it **causes panic** when /// [Python::run] returns `Err` internally. /// If you need to handle failures, please use [Python::run] directly. /// #[macro_export] macro_rules! py_run { ($py:expr, $($val:ident)+, $code:literal) => {{ pyo3::py_run_impl!($py, $($val)+, pyo3::indoc::indoc!($code)) }}; ($py:expr, $($val:ident)+, $code:expr) => {{ pyo3::py_run_impl!($py, $($val)+, &pyo3::unindent::unindent($code)) }}; } #[macro_export] #[doc(hidden)] macro_rules! py_run_impl { ($py:expr, $($val:ident)+, $code:expr) => {{ use pyo3::types::IntoPyDict; use pyo3::ToPyObject; let d = [$((stringify!($val), $val.to_object($py)),)+].into_py_dict($py); $py.run($code, None, Some(d)) .map_err(|e| { e.print($py); // So when this c api function the last line called printed the error to stderr, // the output is only written into a buffer which is never flushed because we // panic before flushing. This is where this hack comes into place $py.run("import sys; sys.stderr.flush()", None, None) .unwrap(); }) .expect($code) }}; } /// Test readme and user guide #[doc(hidden)] pub mod doc_test { macro_rules! doc_comment { ($x:expr, $($tt:tt)*) => { #[doc = $x] $($tt)* }; } macro_rules! doctest { ($x:expr, $y:ident) => { doc_comment!(include_str!($x), mod $y {}); }; } doctest!("../README.md", readme_md); doctest!("../guide/src/advanced.md", guide_advanced_md); doctest!( "../guide/src/building_and_distribution.md", guide_building_and_distribution_md ); doctest!("../guide/src/class.md", guide_class_md); doctest!("../guide/src/conversions.md", guide_conversions_md); doctest!("../guide/src/debugging.md", guide_debugging_md); doctest!("../guide/src/exception.md", guide_exception_md); doctest!("../guide/src/function.md", guide_function_md); doctest!("../guide/src/get_started.md", guide_get_started_md); doctest!("../guide/src/module.md", guide_module_md); doctest!( "../guide/src/python_from_rust.md", guide_python_from_rust_md ); doctest!("../guide/src/parallelism.md", guide_parallelism_md); doctest!("../guide/src/pypy.md", guide_pypy_md); doctest!("../guide/src/rust_cpython.md", guide_rust_cpython_md); doctest!("../guide/src/migration.md", guide_migration_md); }