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| .. _compiling: | |
| Build systems | |
| ############# | |
| .. _build-setuptools: | |
| Building with setuptools | |
| ======================== | |
| For projects on PyPI, building with setuptools is the way to go. Sylvain Corlay | |
| has kindly provided an example project which shows how to set up everything, | |
| including automatic generation of documentation using Sphinx. Please refer to | |
| the [python_example]_ repository. | |
| .. [python_example] https://github.com/pybind/python_example | |
| A helper file is provided with pybind11 that can simplify usage with setuptools. | |
| To use pybind11 inside your ``setup.py``, you have to have some system to | |
| ensure that ``pybind11`` is installed when you build your package. There are | |
| four possible ways to do this, and pybind11 supports all four: You can ask all | |
| users to install pybind11 beforehand (bad), you can use | |
| :ref:`setup_helpers-pep518` (good, but very new and requires Pip 10), | |
| :ref:`setup_helpers-setup_requires` (discouraged by Python packagers now that | |
| PEP 518 is available, but it still works everywhere), or you can | |
| :ref:`setup_helpers-copy-manually` (always works but you have to manually sync | |
| your copy to get updates). | |
| An example of a ``setup.py`` using pybind11's helpers: | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| from glob import glob | |
| from setuptools import setup | |
| from pybind11.setup_helpers import Pybind11Extension | |
| ext_modules = [ | |
| Pybind11Extension( | |
| "python_example", | |
| sorted(glob("src/*.cpp")), # Sort source files for reproducibility | |
| ), | |
| ] | |
| setup(..., ext_modules=ext_modules) | |
| If you want to do an automatic search for the highest supported C++ standard, | |
| that is supported via a ``build_ext`` command override; it will only affect | |
| ``Pybind11Extensions``: | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| from glob import glob | |
| from setuptools import setup | |
| from pybind11.setup_helpers import Pybind11Extension, build_ext | |
| ext_modules = [ | |
| Pybind11Extension( | |
| "python_example", | |
| sorted(glob("src/*.cpp")), | |
| ), | |
| ] | |
| setup(..., cmdclass={"build_ext": build_ext}, ext_modules=ext_modules) | |
| If you have single-file extension modules that are directly stored in the | |
| Python source tree (``foo.cpp`` in the same directory as where a ``foo.py`` | |
| would be located), you can also generate ``Pybind11Extensions`` using | |
| ``setup_helpers.intree_extensions``: ``intree_extensions(["path/to/foo.cpp", | |
| ...])`` returns a list of ``Pybind11Extensions`` which can be passed to | |
| ``ext_modules``, possibly after further customizing their attributes | |
| (``libraries``, ``include_dirs``, etc.). By doing so, a ``foo.*.so`` extension | |
| module will be generated and made available upon installation. | |
| ``intree_extension`` will automatically detect if you are using a ``src``-style | |
| layout (as long as no namespace packages are involved), but you can also | |
| explicitly pass ``package_dir`` to it (as in ``setuptools.setup``). | |
| Since pybind11 does not require NumPy when building, a light-weight replacement | |
| for NumPy's parallel compilation distutils tool is included. Use it like this: | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| from pybind11.setup_helpers import ParallelCompile | |
| # Optional multithreaded build | |
| ParallelCompile("NPY_NUM_BUILD_JOBS").install() | |
| setup(...) | |
| The argument is the name of an environment variable to control the number of | |
| threads, such as ``NPY_NUM_BUILD_JOBS`` (as used by NumPy), though you can set | |
| something different if you want; ``CMAKE_BUILD_PARALLEL_LEVEL`` is another choice | |
| a user might expect. You can also pass ``default=N`` to set the default number | |
| of threads (0 will take the number of threads available) and ``max=N``, the | |
| maximum number of threads; if you have a large extension you may want set this | |
| to a memory dependent number. | |
| If you are developing rapidly and have a lot of C++ files, you may want to | |
| avoid rebuilding files that have not changed. For simple cases were you are | |
| using ``pip install -e .`` and do not have local headers, you can skip the | |
| rebuild if an object file is newer than its source (headers are not checked!) | |
| with the following: | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| from pybind11.setup_helpers import ParallelCompile, naive_recompile | |
| ParallelCompile("NPY_NUM_BUILD_JOBS", needs_recompile=naive_recompile).install() | |
| If you have a more complex build, you can implement a smarter function and pass | |
| it to ``needs_recompile``, or you can use [Ccache]_ instead. ``CXX="cache g++" | |
| pip install -e .`` would be the way to use it with GCC, for example. Unlike the | |
| simple solution, this even works even when not compiling in editable mode, but | |
| it does require Ccache to be installed. | |
| Keep in mind that Pip will not even attempt to rebuild if it thinks it has | |
| already built a copy of your code, which it deduces from the version number. | |
| One way to avoid this is to use [setuptools_scm]_, which will generate a | |
| version number that includes the number of commits since your last tag and a | |
| hash for a dirty directory. Another way to force a rebuild is purge your cache | |
| or use Pip's ``--no-cache-dir`` option. | |
| .. [Ccache] https://ccache.dev | |
| .. [setuptools_scm] https://github.com/pypa/setuptools_scm | |
| .. _setup_helpers-pep518: | |
| PEP 518 requirements (Pip 10+ required) | |
| --------------------------------------- | |
| If you use `PEP 518's <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0518/>`_ | |
| ``pyproject.toml`` file, you can ensure that ``pybind11`` is available during | |
| the compilation of your project. When this file exists, Pip will make a new | |
| virtual environment, download just the packages listed here in ``requires=``, | |
| and build a wheel (binary Python package). It will then throw away the | |
| environment, and install your wheel. | |
| Your ``pyproject.toml`` file will likely look something like this: | |
| .. code-block:: toml | |
| [build-system] | |
| requires = ["setuptools>=42", "wheel", "pybind11~=2.6.1"] | |
| build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta" | |
| .. note:: | |
| The main drawback to this method is that a `PEP 517`_ compliant build tool, | |
| such as Pip 10+, is required for this approach to work; older versions of | |
| Pip completely ignore this file. If you distribute binaries (called wheels | |
| in Python) using something like `cibuildwheel`_, remember that ``setup.py`` | |
| and ``pyproject.toml`` are not even contained in the wheel, so this high | |
| Pip requirement is only for source builds, and will not affect users of | |
| your binary wheels. If you are building SDists and wheels, then | |
| `pypa-build`_ is the recommended official tool. | |
| .. _PEP 517: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0517/ | |
| .. _cibuildwheel: https://cibuildwheel.readthedocs.io | |
| .. _pypa-build: https://pypa-build.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ | |
| .. _setup_helpers-setup_requires: | |
| Classic ``setup_requires`` | |
| -------------------------- | |
| If you want to support old versions of Pip with the classic | |
| ``setup_requires=["pybind11"]`` keyword argument to setup, which triggers a | |
| two-phase ``setup.py`` run, then you will need to use something like this to | |
| ensure the first pass works (which has not yet installed the ``setup_requires`` | |
| packages, since it can't install something it does not know about): | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| try: | |
| from pybind11.setup_helpers import Pybind11Extension | |
| except ImportError: | |
| from setuptools import Extension as Pybind11Extension | |
| It doesn't matter that the Extension class is not the enhanced subclass for the | |
| first pass run; and the second pass will have the ``setup_requires`` | |
| requirements. | |
| This is obviously more of a hack than the PEP 518 method, but it supports | |
| ancient versions of Pip. | |
| .. _setup_helpers-copy-manually: | |
| Copy manually | |
| ------------- | |
| You can also copy ``setup_helpers.py`` directly to your project; it was | |
| designed to be usable standalone, like the old example ``setup.py``. You can | |
| set ``include_pybind11=False`` to skip including the pybind11 package headers, | |
| so you can use it with git submodules and a specific git version. If you use | |
| this, you will need to import from a local file in ``setup.py`` and ensure the | |
| helper file is part of your MANIFEST. | |
| Closely related, if you include pybind11 as a subproject, you can run the | |
| ``setup_helpers.py`` inplace. If loaded correctly, this should even pick up | |
| the correct include for pybind11, though you can turn it off as shown above if | |
| you want to input it manually. | |
| Suggested usage if you have pybind11 as a submodule in ``extern/pybind11``: | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| DIR = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__)) | |
| sys.path.append(os.path.join(DIR, "extern", "pybind11")) | |
| from pybind11.setup_helpers import Pybind11Extension # noqa: E402 | |
| del sys.path[-1] | |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.6 | |
| Added ``setup_helpers`` file. | |
| Building with cppimport | |
| ======================== | |
| [cppimport]_ is a small Python import hook that determines whether there is a C++ | |
| source file whose name matches the requested module. If there is, the file is | |
| compiled as a Python extension using pybind11 and placed in the same folder as | |
| the C++ source file. Python is then able to find the module and load it. | |
| .. [cppimport] https://github.com/tbenthompson/cppimport | |
| .. _cmake: | |
| Building with CMake | |
| =================== | |
| For C++ codebases that have an existing CMake-based build system, a Python | |
| extension module can be created with just a few lines of code: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4...3.18) | |
| project(example LANGUAGES CXX) | |
| add_subdirectory(pybind11) | |
| pybind11_add_module(example example.cpp) | |
| This assumes that the pybind11 repository is located in a subdirectory named | |
| :file:`pybind11` and that the code is located in a file named :file:`example.cpp`. | |
| The CMake command ``add_subdirectory`` will import the pybind11 project which | |
| provides the ``pybind11_add_module`` function. It will take care of all the | |
| details needed to build a Python extension module on any platform. | |
| A working sample project, including a way to invoke CMake from :file:`setup.py` for | |
| PyPI integration, can be found in the [cmake_example]_ repository. | |
| .. [cmake_example] https://github.com/pybind/cmake_example | |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.6 | |
| CMake 3.4+ is required. | |
| Further information can be found at :doc:`cmake/index`. | |
| pybind11_add_module | |
| ------------------- | |
| To ease the creation of Python extension modules, pybind11 provides a CMake | |
| function with the following signature: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| pybind11_add_module(<name> [MODULE | SHARED] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] | |
| [NO_EXTRAS] [THIN_LTO] [OPT_SIZE] source1 [source2 ...]) | |
| This function behaves very much like CMake's builtin ``add_library`` (in fact, | |
| it's a wrapper function around that command). It will add a library target | |
| called ``<name>`` to be built from the listed source files. In addition, it | |
| will take care of all the Python-specific compiler and linker flags as well | |
| as the OS- and Python-version-specific file extension. The produced target | |
| ``<name>`` can be further manipulated with regular CMake commands. | |
| ``MODULE`` or ``SHARED`` may be given to specify the type of library. If no | |
| type is given, ``MODULE`` is used by default which ensures the creation of a | |
| Python-exclusive module. Specifying ``SHARED`` will create a more traditional | |
| dynamic library which can also be linked from elsewhere. ``EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL`` | |
| removes this target from the default build (see CMake docs for details). | |
| Since pybind11 is a template library, ``pybind11_add_module`` adds compiler | |
| flags to ensure high quality code generation without bloat arising from long | |
| symbol names and duplication of code in different translation units. It | |
| sets default visibility to *hidden*, which is required for some pybind11 | |
| features and functionality when attempting to load multiple pybind11 modules | |
| compiled under different pybind11 versions. It also adds additional flags | |
| enabling LTO (Link Time Optimization) and strip unneeded symbols. See the | |
| :ref:`FAQ entry <faq:symhidden>` for a more detailed explanation. These | |
| latter optimizations are never applied in ``Debug`` mode. If ``NO_EXTRAS`` is | |
| given, they will always be disabled, even in ``Release`` mode. However, this | |
| will result in code bloat and is generally not recommended. | |
| As stated above, LTO is enabled by default. Some newer compilers also support | |
| different flavors of LTO such as `ThinLTO`_. Setting ``THIN_LTO`` will cause | |
| the function to prefer this flavor if available. The function falls back to | |
| regular LTO if ``-flto=thin`` is not available. If | |
| ``CMAKE_INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION`` is set (either ``ON`` or ``OFF``), then | |
| that will be respected instead of the built-in flag search. | |
| .. note:: | |
| If you want to set the property form on targets or the | |
| ``CMAKE_INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION_<CONFIG>`` versions of this, you should | |
| still use ``set(CMAKE_INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION OFF)`` (otherwise a | |
| no-op) to disable pybind11's ipo flags. | |
| The ``OPT_SIZE`` flag enables size-based optimization equivalent to the | |
| standard ``/Os`` or ``-Os`` compiler flags and the ``MinSizeRel`` build type, | |
| which avoid optimizations that that can substantially increase the size of the | |
| resulting binary. This flag is particularly useful in projects that are split | |
| into performance-critical parts and associated bindings. In this case, we can | |
| compile the project in release mode (and hence, optimize performance globally), | |
| and specify ``OPT_SIZE`` for the binding target, where size might be the main | |
| concern as performance is often less critical here. A ~25% size reduction has | |
| been observed in practice. This flag only changes the optimization behavior at | |
| a per-target level and takes precedence over the global CMake build type | |
| (``Release``, ``RelWithDebInfo``) except for ``Debug`` builds, where | |
| optimizations remain disabled. | |
| .. _ThinLTO: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThinLTO.html | |
| Configuration variables | |
| ----------------------- | |
| By default, pybind11 will compile modules with the compiler default or the | |
| minimum standard required by pybind11, whichever is higher. You can set the | |
| standard explicitly with | |
| `CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD <https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD.html>`_: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14 CACHE STRING "C++ version selection") # or 11, 14, 17, 20 | |
| set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON) # optional, ensure standard is supported | |
| set(CMAKE_CXX_EXTENSIONS OFF) # optional, keep compiler extensions off | |
| The variables can also be set when calling CMake from the command line using | |
| the ``-D<variable>=<value>`` flag. You can also manually set ``CXX_STANDARD`` | |
| on a target or use ``target_compile_features`` on your targets - anything that | |
| CMake supports. | |
| Classic Python support: The target Python version can be selected by setting | |
| ``PYBIND11_PYTHON_VERSION`` or an exact Python installation can be specified | |
| with ``PYTHON_EXECUTABLE``. For example: | |
| .. code-block:: bash | |
| cmake -DPYBIND11_PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .. | |
| # Another method: | |
| cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/path/to/python .. | |
| # This often is a good way to get the current Python, works in environments: | |
| cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=$(python3 -c "import sys; print(sys.executable)") .. | |
| find_package vs. add_subdirectory | |
| --------------------------------- | |
| For CMake-based projects that don't include the pybind11 repository internally, | |
| an external installation can be detected through ``find_package(pybind11)``. | |
| See the `Config file`_ docstring for details of relevant CMake variables. | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4...3.18) | |
| project(example LANGUAGES CXX) | |
| find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED) | |
| pybind11_add_module(example example.cpp) | |
| Note that ``find_package(pybind11)`` will only work correctly if pybind11 | |
| has been correctly installed on the system, e. g. after downloading or cloning | |
| the pybind11 repository : | |
| .. code-block:: bash | |
| # Classic CMake | |
| cd pybind11 | |
| mkdir build | |
| cd build | |
| cmake .. | |
| make install | |
| # CMake 3.15+ | |
| cd pybind11 | |
| cmake -S . -B build | |
| cmake --build build -j 2 # Build on 2 cores | |
| cmake --install build | |
| Once detected, the aforementioned ``pybind11_add_module`` can be employed as | |
| before. The function usage and configuration variables are identical no matter | |
| if pybind11 is added as a subdirectory or found as an installed package. You | |
| can refer to the same [cmake_example]_ repository for a full sample project | |
| -- just swap out ``add_subdirectory`` for ``find_package``. | |
| .. _Config file: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/blob/master/tools/pybind11Config.cmake.in | |
| .. _find-python-mode: | |
| FindPython mode | |
| --------------- | |
| CMake 3.12+ (3.15+ recommended, 3.18.2+ ideal) added a new module called | |
| FindPython that had a highly improved search algorithm and modern targets | |
| and tools. If you use FindPython, pybind11 will detect this and use the | |
| existing targets instead: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.15...3.22) | |
| project(example LANGUAGES CXX) | |
| find_package(Python 3.6 COMPONENTS Interpreter Development REQUIRED) | |
| find_package(pybind11 CONFIG REQUIRED) | |
| # or add_subdirectory(pybind11) | |
| pybind11_add_module(example example.cpp) | |
| You can also use the targets (as listed below) with FindPython. If you define | |
| ``PYBIND11_FINDPYTHON``, pybind11 will perform the FindPython step for you | |
| (mostly useful when building pybind11's own tests, or as a way to change search | |
| algorithms from the CMake invocation, with ``-DPYBIND11_FINDPYTHON=ON``. | |
| .. warning:: | |
| If you use FindPython to multi-target Python versions, use the individual | |
| targets listed below, and avoid targets that directly include Python parts. | |
| There are `many ways to hint or force a discovery of a specific Python | |
| installation <https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindPython.html>`_), | |
| setting ``Python_ROOT_DIR`` may be the most common one (though with | |
| virtualenv/venv support, and Conda support, this tends to find the correct | |
| Python version more often than the old system did). | |
| .. warning:: | |
| When the Python libraries (i.e. ``libpythonXX.a`` and ``libpythonXX.so`` | |
| on Unix) are not available, as is the case on a manylinux image, the | |
| ``Development`` component will not be resolved by ``FindPython``. When not | |
| using the embedding functionality, CMake 3.18+ allows you to specify | |
| ``Development.Module`` instead of ``Development`` to resolve this issue. | |
| .. versionadded:: 2.6 | |
| Advanced: interface library targets | |
| ----------------------------------- | |
| Pybind11 supports modern CMake usage patterns with a set of interface targets, | |
| available in all modes. The targets provided are: | |
| ``pybind11::headers`` | |
| Just the pybind11 headers and minimum compile requirements | |
| ``pybind11::pybind11`` | |
| Python headers + ``pybind11::headers`` | |
| ``pybind11::python_link_helper`` | |
| Just the "linking" part of pybind11:module | |
| ``pybind11::module`` | |
| Everything for extension modules - ``pybind11::pybind11`` + ``Python::Module`` (FindPython CMake 3.15+) or ``pybind11::python_link_helper`` | |
| ``pybind11::embed`` | |
| Everything for embedding the Python interpreter - ``pybind11::pybind11`` + ``Python::Python`` (FindPython) or Python libs | |
| ``pybind11::lto`` / ``pybind11::thin_lto`` | |
| An alternative to `INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION` for adding link-time optimization. | |
| ``pybind11::windows_extras`` | |
| ``/bigobj`` and ``/mp`` for MSVC. | |
| ``pybind11::opt_size`` | |
| ``/Os`` for MSVC, ``-Os`` for other compilers. Does nothing for debug builds. | |
| Two helper functions are also provided: | |
| ``pybind11_strip(target)`` | |
| Strips a target (uses ``CMAKE_STRIP`` after the target is built) | |
| ``pybind11_extension(target)`` | |
| Sets the correct extension (with SOABI) for a target. | |
| You can use these targets to build complex applications. For example, the | |
| ``add_python_module`` function is identical to: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4) | |
| project(example LANGUAGES CXX) | |
| find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED) # or add_subdirectory(pybind11) | |
| add_library(example MODULE main.cpp) | |
| target_link_libraries(example PRIVATE pybind11::module pybind11::lto pybind11::windows_extras) | |
| pybind11_extension(example) | |
| if(NOT MSVC AND NOT ${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE} MATCHES Debug|RelWithDebInfo) | |
| # Strip unnecessary sections of the binary on Linux/macOS | |
| pybind11_strip(example) | |
| endif() | |
| set_target_properties(example PROPERTIES CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET "hidden" | |
| CUDA_VISIBILITY_PRESET "hidden") | |
| Instead of setting properties, you can set ``CMAKE_*`` variables to initialize these correctly. | |
| .. warning:: | |
| Since pybind11 is a metatemplate library, it is crucial that certain | |
| compiler flags are provided to ensure high quality code generation. In | |
| contrast to the ``pybind11_add_module()`` command, the CMake interface | |
| provides a *composable* set of targets to ensure that you retain flexibility. | |
| It can be especially important to provide or set these properties; the | |
| :ref:`FAQ <faq:symhidden>` contains an explanation on why these are needed. | |
| .. versionadded:: 2.6 | |
| .. _nopython-mode: | |
| Advanced: NOPYTHON mode | |
| ----------------------- | |
| If you want complete control, you can set ``PYBIND11_NOPYTHON`` to completely | |
| disable Python integration (this also happens if you run ``FindPython2`` and | |
| ``FindPython3`` without running ``FindPython``). This gives you complete | |
| freedom to integrate into an existing system (like `Scikit-Build's | |
| <https://scikit-build.readthedocs.io>`_ ``PythonExtensions``). | |
| ``pybind11_add_module`` and ``pybind11_extension`` will be unavailable, and the | |
| targets will be missing any Python specific behavior. | |
| .. versionadded:: 2.6 | |
| Embedding the Python interpreter | |
| -------------------------------- | |
| In addition to extension modules, pybind11 also supports embedding Python into | |
| a C++ executable or library. In CMake, simply link with the ``pybind11::embed`` | |
| target. It provides everything needed to get the interpreter running. The Python | |
| headers and libraries are attached to the target. Unlike ``pybind11::module``, | |
| there is no need to manually set any additional properties here. For more | |
| information about usage in C++, see :doc:`/advanced/embedding`. | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.4...3.18) | |
| project(example LANGUAGES CXX) | |
| find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED) # or add_subdirectory(pybind11) | |
| add_executable(example main.cpp) | |
| target_link_libraries(example PRIVATE pybind11::embed) | |
| .. _building_manually: | |
| Building manually | |
| ================= | |
| pybind11 is a header-only library, hence it is not necessary to link against | |
| any special libraries and there are no intermediate (magic) translation steps. | |
| On Linux, you can compile an example such as the one given in | |
| :ref:`simple_example` using the following command: | |
| .. code-block:: bash | |
| $ c++ -O3 -Wall -shared -std=c++11 -fPIC $(python3 -m pybind11 --includes) example.cpp -o example$(python3-config --extension-suffix) | |
| The ``python3 -m pybind11 --includes`` command fetches the include paths for | |
| both pybind11 and Python headers. This assumes that pybind11 has been installed | |
| using ``pip`` or ``conda``. If it hasn't, you can also manually specify | |
| ``-I <path-to-pybind11>/include`` together with the Python includes path | |
| ``python3-config --includes``. | |
| On macOS: the build command is almost the same but it also requires passing | |
| the ``-undefined dynamic_lookup`` flag so as to ignore missing symbols when | |
| building the module: | |
| .. code-block:: bash | |
| $ c++ -O3 -Wall -shared -std=c++11 -undefined dynamic_lookup $(python3 -m pybind11 --includes) example.cpp -o example$(python3-config --extension-suffix) | |
| In general, it is advisable to include several additional build parameters | |
| that can considerably reduce the size of the created binary. Refer to section | |
| :ref:`cmake` for a detailed example of a suitable cross-platform CMake-based | |
| build system that works on all platforms including Windows. | |
| .. note:: | |
| On Linux and macOS, it's better to (intentionally) not link against | |
| ``libpython``. The symbols will be resolved when the extension library | |
| is loaded into a Python binary. This is preferable because you might | |
| have several different installations of a given Python version (e.g. the | |
| system-provided Python, and one that ships with a piece of commercial | |
| software). In this way, the plugin will work with both versions, instead | |
| of possibly importing a second Python library into a process that already | |
| contains one (which will lead to a segfault). | |
| Building with Bazel | |
| =================== | |
| You can build with the Bazel build system using the `pybind11_bazel | |
| <https://github.com/pybind/pybind11_bazel>`_ repository. | |
| Generating binding code automatically | |
| ===================================== | |
| The ``Binder`` project is a tool for automatic generation of pybind11 binding | |
| code by introspecting existing C++ codebases using LLVM/Clang. See the | |
| [binder]_ documentation for details. | |
| .. [binder] http://cppbinder.readthedocs.io/en/latest/about.html | |
| [AutoWIG]_ is a Python library that wraps automatically compiled libraries into | |
| high-level languages. It parses C++ code using LLVM/Clang technologies and | |
| generates the wrappers using the Mako templating engine. The approach is automatic, | |
| extensible, and applies to very complex C++ libraries, composed of thousands of | |
| classes or incorporating modern meta-programming constructs. | |
| .. [AutoWIG] https://github.com/StatisKit/AutoWIG | |
| [robotpy-build]_ is a is a pure python, cross platform build tool that aims to | |
| simplify creation of python wheels for pybind11 projects, and provide | |
| cross-project dependency management. Additionally, it is able to autogenerate | |
| customizable pybind11-based wrappers by parsing C++ header files. | |
| .. [robotpy-build] https://robotpy-build.readthedocs.io | |