From 444e535f000fd7b53dadf6726d5cd29ac34cc75f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Miodrag Milanovic Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 08:58:19 +0200 Subject: Add pybind11 2.5 source --- 3rdparty/pybind11/docs/compiling.rst | 289 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 289 insertions(+) create mode 100644 3rdparty/pybind11/docs/compiling.rst (limited to '3rdparty/pybind11/docs/compiling.rst') diff --git a/3rdparty/pybind11/docs/compiling.rst b/3rdparty/pybind11/docs/compiling.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c50c7d8a --- /dev/null +++ b/3rdparty/pybind11/docs/compiling.rst @@ -0,0 +1,289 @@ +.. _compiling: + +Build systems +############# + +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 + +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 2.8.12) + project(example) + + 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 + +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( [MODULE | SHARED] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] + [NO_EXTRAS] [SYSTEM] [THIN_LTO] 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 ```` 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 +```` 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 ` 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. + +By default, pybind11 and Python headers will be included with ``-I``. In order +to include pybind11 as system library, e.g. to avoid warnings in downstream +code with warn-levels outside of pybind11's scope, set the option ``SYSTEM``. + +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. + +.. _ThinLTO: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThinLTO.html + +Configuration variables +----------------------- + +By default, pybind11 will compile modules with the C++14 standard, if available +on the target compiler, falling back to C++11 if C++14 support is not +available. Note, however, that this default is subject to change: future +pybind11 releases are expected to migrate to newer C++ standards as they become +available. To override this, the standard flag can be given explicitly in +``PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD``: + +.. code-block:: cmake + + # Use just one of these: + # GCC/clang: + set(PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD -std=c++11) + set(PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD -std=c++14) + set(PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD -std=c++1z) # Experimental C++17 support + # MSVC: + set(PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD /std:c++14) + set(PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD /std:c++latest) # Enables some MSVC C++17 features + + add_subdirectory(pybind11) # or find_package(pybind11) + +Note that this and all other configuration variables must be set **before** the +call to ``add_subdirectory`` or ``find_package``. The variables can also be set +when calling CMake from the command line using the ``-D=`` flag. + +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 .. + # or + cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=path/to/python .. + +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 2.8.12) + project(example) + + 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 + + cd pybind11 + mkdir build + cd build + cmake .. + make install + +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 + +Advanced: interface library target +---------------------------------- + +When using a version of CMake greater than 3.0, pybind11 can additionally +be used as a special *interface library* . The target ``pybind11::module`` +is available with pybind11 headers, Python headers and libraries as needed, +and C++ compile definitions attached. This target is suitable for linking +to an independently constructed (through ``add_library``, not +``pybind11_add_module``) target in the consuming project. + +.. code-block:: cmake + + cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.0) + project(example) + + find_package(pybind11 REQUIRED) # or add_subdirectory(pybind11) + + add_library(example MODULE main.cpp) + target_link_libraries(example PRIVATE pybind11::module) + set_target_properties(example PROPERTIES PREFIX "${PYTHON_MODULE_PREFIX}" + SUFFIX "${PYTHON_MODULE_EXTENSION}") + +.. 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 + library only provides the *minimal* set of parameters to ensure that the + code using pybind11 compiles, but it does **not** pass these extra compiler + flags (i.e. this is up to you). + + These include Link Time Optimization (``-flto`` on GCC/Clang/ICPC, ``/GL`` + and ``/LTCG`` on Visual Studio) and .OBJ files with many sections on Visual + Studio (``/bigobj``). The :ref:`FAQ ` contains an + explanation on why these are needed. + +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 3.0) + project(example) + + 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 flags given here assume that you're using Python 3. For Python 2, just +change the executable appropriately (to ``python`` or ``python2``). + +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 /include`` together with the Python includes path +``python3-config --includes``. + +Note that Python 2.7 modules don't use a special suffix, so you should simply +use ``example.so`` instead of ``example`python3-config --extension-suffix```. +Besides, the ``--extension-suffix`` option may or may not be available, depending +on the distribution; in the latter case, the module extension can be manually +set to ``.so``. + +On Mac OS: 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). + +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 -- cgit v1.2.3