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nexedi
cython
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e16a1648
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e16a1648
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Jun 15, 2018
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Jun 15, 2018
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Merge pull request #2298 from gabrieldemarmiesse/more_info_on_pyximport
Added more info on pyximport in compilation.rst
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docs/src/reference/compilation.rst
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@@ -492,6 +492,64 @@ on end user side as it hooks into their import system. The best way
to cater for end users is to provide pre-built binary packages in the
`wheel <https://wheel.readthedocs.io/>`_ packaging format.
Arguments
---------
The function ``pyximport.install()`` can take several arguments to
influence the compilation of Cython or Python files.
.. autofunction:: pyximport.install
Dependency Handling
--------------------
Since :mod:`pyximport` does not use :func:`cythonize()` internally, it currently
requires a different setup for dependencies. It is possible to declare that
your module depends on multiple files, (likely ``.h`` and ``.pxd`` files).
If your Cython module is named ``foo`` and thus has the filename
:file:`foo.pyx` then you should create another file in the same directory
called :file:`foo.pyxdep`. The :file:`modname.pyxdep` file can be a list of
filenames or "globs" (like ``*.pxd`` or ``include/*.h``). Each filename or
glob must be on a separate line. Pyximport will check the file date for each
of those files before deciding whether to rebuild the module. In order to
keep track of the fact that the dependency has been handled, Pyximport updates
the modification time of your ".pyx" source file. Future versions may do
something more sophisticated like informing distutils of the dependencies
directly.
Limitations
------------
:mod:`pyximport` does not use :func:`cythonize()`. Thus it is not
possible to do things like using compiler directives at
the top of Cython files or compiling Cython code to C++.
Pyximport does not give you any control over how your Cython file is
compiled. Usually the defaults are fine. You might run into problems if
you wanted to write your program in half-C, half-Cython and build them
into a single library.
Pyximport does not hide the Distutils/GCC warnings and errors generated
by the import process. Arguably this will give you better feedback if
something went wrong and why. And if nothing went wrong it will give you
the warm fuzzy feeling that pyximport really did rebuild your module as it
was supposed to.
Basic module reloading support is available with the option ``reload_support=True``.
Note that this will generate a new module filename for each build and thus
end up loading multiple shared libraries into memory over time. CPython has limited
support for reloading shared libraries as such,
see `PEP 489 <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0489/>`_.
Pyximport puts both your ``.c`` file and the platform-specific binary into
a separate build directory, usually ``$HOME/.pyxblx/``. To copy it back
into the package hierarchy (usually next to the source file) for manual
reuse, you can pass the option ``inplace=True``.
Compiling with ``cython.inline``
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