Rust bindings for the Python interpreter
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Paul Ganssle f47697e2b5
Refactor pyobject_* macros
See 8c26020015 for general change.
2018-08-21 14:29:35 -04:00
.github Update issue_template.md 2018-06-05 11:53:04 +02:00
ci/travis Many small improvements 2018-08-04 19:56:59 +02:00
examples/word-count More nightly fixes 2018-08-19 20:42:17 +02:00
guide v0.4.1 2018-08-20 14:34:34 +02:00
pyo3-derive-backend v0.4.1 2018-08-20 14:34:34 +02:00
pyo3cls v0.4.1 2018-08-20 14:34:34 +02:00
src Refactor pyobject_* macros 2018-08-21 14:29:35 -04:00
tests Add time_with_fold 2018-08-21 14:29:35 -04:00
.gitignore Fix make test 2018-05-01 20:15:43 +02:00
.travis.yml Cleanup 2018-08-19 20:06:47 +02:00
appveyor.yml Enable backtrace on AppVeyor too 2018-03-15 13:51:12 +03:00
build.rs More nightly fixes 2018-08-19 20:42:17 +02:00
Cargo.toml Add objects/datetime.rs 2018-08-21 14:29:33 -04:00
CHANGELOG.md Added an explenation that the GIL can temporarily be released even while holding a GILGuard 2018-08-20 22:56:24 +02:00
LICENSE Rename LICENSE-APACHE to LICENSE 2017-10-04 08:56:57 -07:00
Makefile 0.3.2 2018-07-22 21:36:18 +02:00
README.md More nightly fixes 2018-08-19 20:42:17 +02:00
rust-toolchain add a rust-toolchain file in the repo to indicate the toolchain used 2017-12-27 22:36:13 +08:00

PyO3

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Rust bindings for Python. This includes running and interacting with python code from a rust binaries as well as writing native python modules.

A comparison with rust-cpython can be found in the guide.

Usage

Pyo3 supports python 2.7 as well as python 3.5 and up. The minimum required rust version is 1.30.0-nightly 2018-08-18.

You can either write a native python module in rust or use python from a rust binary.

Using rust from python

Pyo3 can be used to generate a native python module.

Cargo.toml:

[package]
name = "rust-py"
version = "0.1.0"

[lib]
name = "rust_py"
crate-type = ["cdylib"]

[dependencies.pyo3]
version = "0.4"
features = ["extension-module"]

src/lib.rs

#![feature(specialization)]

#[macro_use]
extern crate pyo3;

use pyo3::prelude::*;

#[pyfunction]
/// Formats the sum of two numbers as string
fn sum_as_string(a: usize, b: usize) -> PyResult<String> {
    Ok((a + b).to_string())
}

/// This module is a python moudle implemented in Rust.
#[pymodinit]
fn rust_py(py: Python, m: &PyModule) -> PyResult<()> {
    m.add_function(wrap_function!(sum_as_string))?;

    Ok(())
}

On windows and linux, you can build normally with cargo build --release. On Mac Os, 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:

[target.x86_64-apple-darwin]
rustflags = [
  "-C", "link-arg=-undefined",
  "-C", "link-arg=dynamic_lookup",
]

Also on macOS, you will need to rename the output from *.dylib to *.so. On Windows, you will need to rename the output from *.dll to *.pyd.

setuptools-rust can be used to generate a python package and includes the commands above by default. See examples/word-count and the associated setup.py.

Using python from rust

Add pyo3 this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
pyo3 = "0.3"

Example program displaying the value of sys.version:

#![feature(specialization)]

extern crate pyo3;

use pyo3::prelude::*;

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 = PyDict::new(py);
    locals.set_item("os", py.import("os")?)?;
    let user: String = py.eval("os.getenv('USER') or os.getenv('USERNAME')", None, Some(&locals))?.extract()?;

    println!("Hello {}, I'm Python {}", user, version);
    Ok(())
}

Examples and tooling

License

PyO3 is licensed under the Apache-2.0 license. Python is licensed under the Python License.