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Runtime error
| Frequently asked questions | |
| ########################## | |
| "ImportError: dynamic module does not define init function" | |
| =========================================================== | |
| 1. Make sure that the name specified in PYBIND11_MODULE is identical to the | |
| filename of the extension library (without suffixes such as .so) | |
| 2. If the above did not fix the issue, you are likely using an incompatible | |
| version of Python (for instance, the extension library was compiled against | |
| Python 2, while the interpreter is running on top of some version of Python | |
| 3, or vice versa). | |
| "Symbol not found: ``__Py_ZeroStruct`` / ``_PyInstanceMethod_Type``" | |
| ======================================================================== | |
| See the first answer. | |
| "SystemError: dynamic module not initialized properly" | |
| ====================================================== | |
| See the first answer. | |
| The Python interpreter immediately crashes when importing my module | |
| =================================================================== | |
| See the first answer. | |
| CMake doesn't detect the right Python version | |
| ============================================= | |
| The CMake-based build system will try to automatically detect the installed | |
| version of Python and link against that. When this fails, or when there are | |
| multiple versions of Python and it finds the wrong one, delete | |
| ``CMakeCache.txt`` and then invoke CMake as follows: | |
| .. code-block:: bash | |
| cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE:FILEPATH=<path-to-python-executable> . | |
| .. _faq_reference_arguments: | |
| Limitations involving reference arguments | |
| ========================================= | |
| In C++, it's fairly common to pass arguments using mutable references or | |
| mutable pointers, which allows both read and write access to the value | |
| supplied by the caller. This is sometimes done for efficiency reasons, or to | |
| realize functions that have multiple return values. Here are two very basic | |
| examples: | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| void increment(int &i) { i++; } | |
| void increment_ptr(int *i) { (*i)++; } | |
| In Python, all arguments are passed by reference, so there is no general | |
| issue in binding such code from Python. | |
| However, certain basic Python types (like ``str``, ``int``, ``bool``, | |
| ``float``, etc.) are **immutable**. This means that the following attempt | |
| to port the function to Python doesn't have the same effect on the value | |
| provided by the caller -- in fact, it does nothing at all. | |
| .. code-block:: python | |
| def increment(i): | |
| i += 1 # nope.. | |
| pybind11 is also affected by such language-level conventions, which means that | |
| binding ``increment`` or ``increment_ptr`` will also create Python functions | |
| that don't modify their arguments. | |
| Although inconvenient, one workaround is to encapsulate the immutable types in | |
| a custom type that does allow modifications. | |
| An other alternative involves binding a small wrapper lambda function that | |
| returns a tuple with all output arguments (see the remainder of the | |
| documentation for examples on binding lambda functions). An example: | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| int foo(int &i) { i++; return 123; } | |
| and the binding code | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| m.def("foo", [](int i) { int rv = foo(i); return std::make_tuple(rv, i); }); | |
| How can I reduce the build time? | |
| ================================ | |
| It's good practice to split binding code over multiple files, as in the | |
| following example: | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| void init_ex1(py::module &); | |
| void init_ex2(py::module &); | |
| /* ... */ | |
| PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) { | |
| init_ex1(m); | |
| init_ex2(m); | |
| /* ... */ | |
| } | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| void init_ex1(py::module &m) { | |
| m.def("add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; }); | |
| } | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| void init_ex2(py::module &m) { | |
| m.def("sub", [](int a, int b) { return a - b; }); | |
| } | |
| .. code-block:: pycon | |
| >>> import example | |
| >>> example.add(1, 2) | |
| 3 | |
| >>> example.sub(1, 1) | |
| 0 | |
| As shown above, the various ``init_ex`` functions should be contained in | |
| separate files that can be compiled independently from one another, and then | |
| linked together into the same final shared object. Following this approach | |
| will: | |
| 1. reduce memory requirements per compilation unit. | |
| 2. enable parallel builds (if desired). | |
| 3. allow for faster incremental builds. For instance, when a single class | |
| definition is changed, only a subset of the binding code will generally need | |
| to be recompiled. | |
| "recursive template instantiation exceeded maximum depth of 256" | |
| ================================================================ | |
| If you receive an error about excessive recursive template evaluation, try | |
| specifying a larger value, e.g. ``-ftemplate-depth=1024`` on GCC/Clang. The | |
| culprit is generally the generation of function signatures at compile time | |
| using C++14 template metaprogramming. | |
| .. _`faq:hidden_visibility`: | |
| "βSomeClassβ declared with greater visibility than the type of its field βSomeClass::memberβ [-Wattributes]" | |
| ============================================================================================================ | |
| This error typically indicates that you are compiling without the required | |
| ``-fvisibility`` flag. pybind11 code internally forces hidden visibility on | |
| all internal code, but if non-hidden (and thus *exported*) code attempts to | |
| include a pybind type (for example, ``py::object`` or ``py::list``) you can run | |
| into this warning. | |
| To avoid it, make sure you are specifying ``-fvisibility=hidden`` when | |
| compiling pybind code. | |
| As to why ``-fvisibility=hidden`` is necessary, because pybind modules could | |
| have been compiled under different versions of pybind itself, it is also | |
| important that the symbols defined in one module do not clash with the | |
| potentially-incompatible symbols defined in another. While Python extension | |
| modules are usually loaded with localized symbols (under POSIX systems | |
| typically using ``dlopen`` with the ``RTLD_LOCAL`` flag), this Python default | |
| can be changed, but even if it isn't it is not always enough to guarantee | |
| complete independence of the symbols involved when not using | |
| ``-fvisibility=hidden``. | |
| Additionally, ``-fvisiblity=hidden`` can deliver considerably binary size | |
| savings. (See the following section for more details). | |
| .. _`faq:symhidden`: | |
| How can I create smaller binaries? | |
| ================================== | |
| To do its job, pybind11 extensively relies on a programming technique known as | |
| *template metaprogramming*, which is a way of performing computation at compile | |
| time using type information. Template metaprogamming usually instantiates code | |
| involving significant numbers of deeply nested types that are either completely | |
| removed or reduced to just a few instructions during the compiler's optimization | |
| phase. However, due to the nested nature of these types, the resulting symbol | |
| names in the compiled extension library can be extremely long. For instance, | |
| the included test suite contains the following symbol: | |
| .. only:: html | |
| .. code-block:: none | |
| _β_βZβNβ8βpβyβbβiβnβdβ1β1β1β2βcβpβpβ_βfβuβnβcβtβiβoβnβCβ1βIβvβ8βEβxβaβmβpβlβeβ2βJβRβNβSβtβ3β_β_β1β6βvβeβcβtβoβrβIβNβSβ3β_β1β2βbβaβsβiβcβ_βsβtβrβiβnβgβIβwβNβSβ3β_β1β1βcβhβaβrβ_βtβrβaβiβtβsβIβwβEβEβNβSβ3β_β9βaβlβlβoβcβaβtβoβrβIβwβEβEβEβEβNβSβ8β_βIβSβAβ_βEβEβEβEβEβJβNβSβ_β4βnβaβmβeβEβNβSβ_β7βsβiβbβlβiβnβgβEβNβSβ_β9βiβsβ_βmβeβtβhβoβdβEβAβ2β8β_βcβEβEβEβMβTβ0β_βFβTβ_βDβpβTβ1β_βEβDβpβRβKβTβ2β_ | |
| .. only:: not html | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| __ZN8pybind1112cpp_functionC1Iv8Example2JRNSt3__16vectorINS3_12basic_stringIwNS3_11char_traitsIwEENS3_9allocatorIwEEEENS8_ISA_EEEEEJNS_4nameENS_7siblingENS_9is_methodEA28_cEEEMT0_FT_DpT1_EDpRKT2_ | |
| which is the mangled form of the following function type: | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| pybind11::cpp_function::cpp_function<void, Example2, std::__1::vector<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> >, std::__1::allocator<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> > > >&, pybind11::name, pybind11::sibling, pybind11::is_method, char [28]>(void (Example2::*)(std::__1::vector<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> >, std::__1::allocator<std::__1::basic_string<wchar_t, std::__1::char_traits<wchar_t>, std::__1::allocator<wchar_t> > > >&), pybind11::name const&, pybind11::sibling const&, pybind11::is_method const&, char const (&) [28]) | |
| The memory needed to store just the mangled name of this function (196 bytes) | |
| is larger than the actual piece of code (111 bytes) it represents! On the other | |
| hand, it's silly to even give this function a name -- after all, it's just a | |
| tiny cog in a bigger piece of machinery that is not exposed to the outside | |
| world. So we'll generally only want to export symbols for those functions which | |
| are actually called from the outside. | |
| This can be achieved by specifying the parameter ``-fvisibility=hidden`` to GCC | |
| and Clang, which sets the default symbol visibility to *hidden*, which has a | |
| tremendous impact on the final binary size of the resulting extension library. | |
| (On Visual Studio, symbols are already hidden by default, so nothing needs to | |
| be done there.) | |
| In addition to decreasing binary size, ``-fvisibility=hidden`` also avoids | |
| potential serious issues when loading multiple modules and is required for | |
| proper pybind operation. See the previous FAQ entry for more details. | |
| Working with ancient Visual Studio 2008 builds on Windows | |
| ========================================================= | |
| The official Windows distributions of Python are compiled using truly | |
| ancient versions of Visual Studio that lack good C++11 support. Some users | |
| implicitly assume that it would be impossible to load a plugin built with | |
| Visual Studio 2015 into a Python distribution that was compiled using Visual | |
| Studio 2008. However, no such issue exists: it's perfectly legitimate to | |
| interface DLLs that are built with different compilers and/or C libraries. | |
| Common gotchas to watch out for involve not ``free()``-ing memory region | |
| that that were ``malloc()``-ed in another shared library, using data | |
| structures with incompatible ABIs, and so on. pybind11 is very careful not | |
| to make these types of mistakes. | |
| How can I properly handle Ctrl-C in long-running functions? | |
| =========================================================== | |
| Ctrl-C is received by the Python interpreter, and holds it until the GIL | |
| is released, so a long-running function won't be interrupted. | |
| To interrupt from inside your function, you can use the ``PyErr_CheckSignals()`` | |
| function, that will tell if a signal has been raised on the Python side. This | |
| function merely checks a flag, so its impact is negligible. When a signal has | |
| been received, you must either explicitly interrupt execution by throwing | |
| ``py::error_already_set`` (which will propagate the existing | |
| ``KeyboardInterrupt``), or clear the error (which you usually will not want): | |
| .. code-block:: cpp | |
| PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) | |
| { | |
| m.def("long running_func", []() | |
| { | |
| for (;;) { | |
| if (PyErr_CheckSignals() != 0) | |
| throw py::error_already_set(); | |
| // Long running iteration | |
| } | |
| }); | |
| } | |
| Inconsistent detection of Python version in CMake and pybind11 | |
| ============================================================== | |
| The functions ``find_package(PythonInterp)`` and ``find_package(PythonLibs)`` provided by CMake | |
| for Python version detection are not used by pybind11 due to unreliability and limitations that make | |
| them unsuitable for pybind11's needs. Instead pybind provides its own, more reliable Python detection | |
| CMake code. Conflicts can arise, however, when using pybind11 in a project that *also* uses the CMake | |
| Python detection in a system with several Python versions installed. | |
| This difference may cause inconsistencies and errors if *both* mechanisms are used in the same project. Consider the following | |
| Cmake code executed in a system with Python 2.7 and 3.x installed: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| find_package(PythonInterp) | |
| find_package(PythonLibs) | |
| find_package(pybind11) | |
| It will detect Python 2.7 and pybind11 will pick it as well. | |
| In contrast this code: | |
| .. code-block:: cmake | |
| find_package(pybind11) | |
| find_package(PythonInterp) | |
| find_package(PythonLibs) | |
| will detect Python 3.x for pybind11 and may crash on ``find_package(PythonLibs)`` afterwards. | |
| It is advised to avoid using ``find_package(PythonInterp)`` and ``find_package(PythonLibs)`` from CMake and rely | |
| on pybind11 in detecting Python version. If this is not possible CMake machinery should be called *before* including pybind11. | |
| How to cite this project? | |
| ========================= | |
| We suggest the following BibTeX template to cite pybind11 in scientific | |
| discourse: | |
| .. code-block:: bash | |
| @misc{pybind11, | |
| author = {Wenzel Jakob and Jason Rhinelander and Dean Moldovan}, | |
| year = {2017}, | |
| note = {https://github.com/pybind/pybind11}, | |
| title = {pybind11 -- Seamless operability between C++11 and Python} | |
| } | |