extern crate pkg_config; extern crate regex; use std::process::Command; use std::collections::HashMap; use std::env; use regex::Regex; use std::fs; struct PythonVersion { major: u8, // minor == None means any minor version will do minor: Option } const CFG_KEY: &'static str = "py_sys_config"; // windows' python writes out lines with the windows crlf sequence; // posix platforms and mac os should write out lines with just lf. #[cfg(target_os="windows")] static NEWLINE_SEQUENCE: &'static str = "\r\n"; #[cfg(not(target_os="windows"))] static NEWLINE_SEQUENCE: &'static str = "\n"; // A list of python interpreter compile-time preprocessor defines that // we will pick up and pass to rustc via --cfg=py_sys_config={varname}; // this allows using them conditional cfg attributes in the .rs files, so // // #[cfg(py_sys_config="{varname}"] // // is the equivalent of #ifdef {varname} name in C. // // see Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt in the python source for what these mean. // // (hrm, this is sort of re-implementing what distutils does, except // by passing command line args instead of referring to a python.h) #[cfg(not(target_os="windows"))] static SYSCONFIG_FLAGS: [&'static str; 7] = [ "Py_USING_UNICODE", "Py_UNICODE_WIDE", "WITH_THREAD", "Py_DEBUG", "Py_REF_DEBUG", "Py_TRACE_REFS", "COUNT_ALLOCS", ]; static SYSCONFIG_VALUES: [&'static str; 1] = [ // cfg doesn't support flags with values, just bools - so flags // below are translated into bools as {varname}_{val} // // for example, Py_UNICODE_SIZE_2 or Py_UNICODE_SIZE_4 "Py_UNICODE_SIZE" // note - not present on python 3.3+, which is always wide ]; /// Examine python's compile flags to pass to cfg by launching /// the interpreter and printing variables of interest from /// sysconfig.get_config_vars. #[cfg(not(target_os="windows"))] fn get_config_vars(python_path: &String) -> Result, String> { let mut script = "import sysconfig; \ config = sysconfig.get_config_vars();".to_owned(); for k in SYSCONFIG_FLAGS.iter().chain(SYSCONFIG_VALUES.iter()) { script.push_str(&format!("print(config.get('{}', {}))", k, if is_value(k) { "None" } else { "0" } )); script.push_str(";"); } let mut cmd = Command::new(python_path); cmd.arg("-c").arg(script); let out = try!(cmd.output().map_err(|e| { format!("failed to run python interpreter `{:?}`: {}", cmd, e) })); if !out.status.success() { let stderr = String::from_utf8(out.stderr).unwrap(); let mut msg = format!("python script failed with stderr:\n\n"); msg.push_str(&stderr); return Err(msg); } let stdout = String::from_utf8(out.stdout).unwrap(); let split_stdout: Vec<&str> = stdout.trim_right().split(NEWLINE_SEQUENCE).collect(); if split_stdout.len() != SYSCONFIG_VALUES.len() + SYSCONFIG_FLAGS.len() { return Err( format!("python stdout len didn't return expected number of lines: {}", split_stdout.len()).to_string()); } let all_vars = SYSCONFIG_FLAGS.iter().chain(SYSCONFIG_VALUES.iter()); // let var_map: HashMap = HashMap::new(); Ok(all_vars.zip(split_stdout.iter()) .fold(HashMap::new(), |mut memo: HashMap, (&k, &v)| { if !(v.to_owned() == "None" && is_value(k)) { memo.insert(k.to_owned(), v.to_owned()); } memo })) } #[cfg(target_os="windows")] fn get_config_vars(_: &String) -> Result, String> { // sysconfig is missing all the flags on windows, so we can't actually // query the interpreter directly for its build flags. // // For the time being, this is the flags as defined in the python source's // PC\pyconfig.h. This won't work correctly if someone has built their // python with a modified pyconfig.h - sorry if that is you, you will have // to comment/uncomment the lines below. let mut map: HashMap = HashMap::new(); map.insert("Py_USING_UNICODE".to_owned(), "1".to_owned()); map.insert("Py_UNICODE_WIDE".to_owned(), "0".to_owned()); map.insert("WITH_THREAD".to_owned(), "1".to_owned()); map.insert("Py_UNICODE_SIZE".to_owned(), "2".to_owned()); // This is defined #ifdef _DEBUG. The visual studio build seems to produce // a specially named pythonXX_d.exe and pythonXX_d.dll when you build the // Debug configuration, which this script doesn't currently support anyway. // map.insert("Py_DEBUG", "1"); // Uncomment these manually if your python was built with these and you want // the cfg flags to be set in rust. // // map.insert("Py_REF_DEBUG", "1"); // map.insert("Py_TRACE_REFS", "1"); // map.insert("COUNT_ALLOCS", 1"); Ok(map) } fn is_value(key: &str) -> bool { SYSCONFIG_VALUES.iter().find(|x| **x == key).is_some() } fn cfg_line_for_var(key: &str, val: &str) -> Option { if is_value(key) { // is a value; suffix the key name with the value Some(format!("cargo:rustc-cfg={}=\"{}_{}\"\n", CFG_KEY, key, val)) } else if val != "0" { // is a flag that isn't zero Some(format!("cargo:rustc-cfg={}=\"{}\"", CFG_KEY, key)) } else { // is a flag that is zero None } } /// Run a python script using the 'python' located by PATH. fn run_python_script(script: &str) -> Result { let mut cmd = Command::new("python"); cmd.arg("-c").arg(script); let out = try!(cmd.output().map_err(|e| { format!("failed to run python interpreter `{:?}`: {}", cmd, e) })); if !out.status.success() { let stderr = String::from_utf8(out.stderr).unwrap(); let mut msg = format!("python script failed with stderr:\n\n"); msg.push_str(&stderr); return Err(msg); } let out = String::from_utf8(out.stdout).unwrap(); return Ok(out); } #[cfg(not(target_os="macos"))] #[cfg(not(target_os="windows"))] fn get_rustc_link_lib(version: &PythonVersion, enable_shared: bool) -> Result { let dotted_version = format!("{}.{}", version.major, version.minor.unwrap()); if enable_shared { Ok(format!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=python{}", dotted_version)) } else { Ok(format!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=static=python{}", dotted_version)) } } #[cfg(target_os="macos")] fn get_macos_linkmodel() -> Result { let script = "import MacOS; print MacOS.linkmodel;"; let out = run_python_script(script).unwrap(); Ok(out.trim_right().to_owned()) } #[cfg(target_os="macos")] fn get_rustc_link_lib(version: &PythonVersion, _: bool) -> Result { // os x can be linked to a framework or static or dynamic, and // Py_ENABLE_SHARED is wrong; framework means shared library let dotted_version = format!("{}.{}", version.major, version.minor.unwrap()); match get_macos_linkmodel().unwrap().as_ref() { "static" => Ok(format!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=static=python{}", dotted_version)), "dynamic" => Ok(format!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=python{}", dotted_version)), "framework" => Ok(format!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=python{}", dotted_version)), other => Err(format!("unknown linkmodel {}", other)) } } /// Check that the interpreter's reported version matches expected_version; /// if it does, return the specific version the interpreter reports. fn get_interpreter_version(line: &str, expected_version: &PythonVersion) -> Result { let version_re = Regex::new(r"\((\d+), (\d+)\)").unwrap(); let interpreter_version = match version_re.captures(&line) { Some(cap) => PythonVersion { major: cap.at(1).unwrap().parse().unwrap(), minor: Some(cap.at(2).unwrap().parse().unwrap()) }, None => return Err( format!("Unexpected response to version query {}", line)) }; if interpreter_version.major != expected_version.major || (expected_version.minor.is_some() && interpreter_version.minor != expected_version.minor) { Err(format!("'python' is not version {}.{} (is {})", expected_version.major, match expected_version.minor { Some(v) => v.to_string(), None => "*".to_owned() }, line)) } else { Ok(interpreter_version) } } #[cfg(target_os="windows")] fn get_rustc_link_lib(version: &PythonVersion, _: bool) -> Result { // Py_ENABLE_SHARED doesn't seem to be present on windows. Ok(format!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=python{}{}", version.major, match version.minor { Some(minor) => minor.to_string(), None => "".to_owned() })) } /// Deduce configuration from the 'python' in the current PATH and print /// cargo vars to stdout. /// /// Note that if the python doesn't satisfy expected_version, this will error. fn configure_from_path(expected_version: &PythonVersion) -> Result { let script = "import sys; import sysconfig; print(sys.version_info[0:2]); \ print(sysconfig.get_config_var('LIBDIR')); \ print(sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_ENABLE_SHARED')); \ print(sys.exec_prefix);"; let out = run_python_script(script).unwrap(); let lines: Vec<&str> = out.split(NEWLINE_SEQUENCE).collect(); let version: &str = lines[0]; let libpath: &str = lines[1]; let enable_shared: &str = lines[2]; let exec_prefix: &str = lines[3]; let interpreter_version = try!(get_interpreter_version(version, expected_version)); println!("{}", get_rustc_link_lib(&interpreter_version, enable_shared == "1").unwrap()); if libpath != "None" { println!("cargo:rustc-link-search=native={}", libpath); } else if cfg!(target_os="windows") { println!("cargo:rustc-link-search=native={}\\libs", exec_prefix); } let rel_interpreter_path = if cfg!(target_os="windows") { "/python" } else { "/bin/python" }; return Ok(format!("{}{}", exec_prefix, rel_interpreter_path)); } /// Deduce configuration from the python-X.X in pkg-config and print /// cargo vars to stdout. fn configure_from_pkgconfig(version: &PythonVersion, pkg_name: &str) -> Result { // this emits relevant build info to stdout, which is picked up by the // build chain (funny name for something with side-effects!) try!(pkg_config::find_library(pkg_name)); // This seems to be a convention - unfortunately pkg-config doesn't // tell you the executable name, but I've noticed at least on // OS X homebrew the python bin dir for 3.4 doesn't actually contain // a 'python'. let exec_prefix = pkg_config::Config::get_variable(pkg_name, "exec_prefix").unwrap(); // try to find the python interpreter in the exec_prefix somewhere. // the .pc doesn't tell us :( let mut attempts = vec![ format!("/bin/python{}", version.major), "/bin/python".to_owned() ]; // Try to seek python(major).(minor) if the user specified a minor. // // Ideally, we'd still do this even if they didn't based off the // specific version of the package located by pkg_config above, // but it's not obvious how to reliably extract that out of the .pc. if version.minor.is_some() { attempts.insert(0, format!("/bin/python{}_{}", version.major, version.minor.unwrap())); } for attempt in attempts.iter() { let possible_exec_name = format!("{}{}", exec_prefix, attempt); match fs::metadata(&possible_exec_name) { Ok(_) => return Ok(possible_exec_name), Err(_) => () }; } return Err("Unable to locate python interpreter".to_owned()); } /// Determine the python version we're supposed to be building /// from the features passed via the environment. /// /// The environment variable can choose to omit a minor /// version if the user doesn't care. fn version_from_env() -> Result { let re = Regex::new(r"CARGO_FEATURE_PYTHON_(\d+)(_(\d+))?").unwrap(); // sort env::vars so we get more explicit version specifiers first // so if the user passes e.g. the python-3 feature and the python-3-5 // feature, python-3-5 takes priority. let mut vars = env::vars().collect::>(); vars.sort_by(|a, b| b.cmp(a)); for (key, _) in vars { match re.captures(&key) { Some(cap) => return Ok(PythonVersion { major: cap.at(1).unwrap().parse().unwrap(), minor: match cap.at(3) { Some(s) => Some(s.parse().unwrap()), None => None } }), None => () } } Err("Python version feature was not found. At least one python version \ feature must be enabled.".to_owned()) } fn main() { // 1. Setup cfg variables so we can do conditional compilation in this // library based on the python interpeter's compilation flags. This is // necessary for e.g. matching the right unicode and threading interfaces. // // By default, try to use pkgconfig - this seems to be a rust norm. // // If you want to use a different python, setting the appropriate // PYTHON_X.X_NO_PKG_CONFIG environment variable will cause the script // to pick up the python in your PATH; e.g. for python27 X.X is 2.7. // // This will work smoothly with an activated virtualenv. // // If you have troubles with your shell accepting '.' in a var name, // try using 'env' (sorry but this isn't our fault - it just has to // match the pkg-config package name, which is going to have a . in it). let version = version_from_env().unwrap(); let pkg_name = match version.minor { Some(minor) => format!("python-{}.{}", version.major, minor), None => format!("python{}", version.major) }; let python_interpreter_path = match configure_from_pkgconfig(&version, &pkg_name) { Ok(p) => p, // no pkgconfig - either it failed or user set the environment // variable "PYTHON_2.7_NO_PKG_CONFIG". Err(_) => configure_from_path(&version).unwrap() }; let config_map = get_config_vars(&python_interpreter_path).unwrap(); for (key, val) in &config_map { match cfg_line_for_var(key, val) { Some(line) => println!("{}", line), None => () } } // 2. Export python interpreter compilation flags as cargo variables that // will be visible to dependents. All flags will be available to dependent // build scripts in the environment variable DEP_PYTHON27_PYTHON_FLAGS as // comma separated list; each item in the list looks like // // {VAL,FLAG}_{flag_name}=val; // // FLAG indicates the variable is always 0 or 1 // VAL indicates it can take on any value // // rust-cypthon/build.rs contains an example of how to unpack this data // into cfg flags that replicate the ones present in this library, so // you can use the same cfg syntax. let flags: String = config_map.iter().fold("".to_owned(), |memo, (key, val)| { if is_value(key) { memo + format!("VAL_{}={},", key, val).as_ref() } else if val != "0" { memo + format!("FLAG_{}={},", key, val).as_ref() } else { memo } }); println!("cargo:python_flags={}", if flags.len() > 0 { &flags[..flags.len()-1] } else { "" }); }