Commit Graph

858 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Krzysztof Fornalczyk
5c8746ff13 check for already existing enum value added; added test (#1453)
* check for already existing enum value added; added test

* added enum value name to exception message

* test for defining enum with multiple identical names moved to test_enum.cpp/py
2018-09-11 10:59:56 +02:00
Wenzel Jakob
44e39e0de7
fix regression reported by @cyfdecyf in #1454 (#1517) 2018-09-11 09:32:45 +02:00
Michael Goulding
77374a7e5f VS 15.8.0 Preview 4.0 has a bug with alias templates (#1462)
* VS 15.8.0 Preview 4.0 has a bug with alias templates
2018-09-08 16:25:11 +02:00
Justin Bassett
2cbafb057f fix detail::pythonbuf::overflow()'s return value to return not_eof(c) (#1479) 2018-08-29 11:48:30 +02:00
Henry Schreiner
3789b4f9fd Update C++ macros for C++17 and MSVC Z mode (#1347) 2018-08-29 00:07:35 +02:00
Matthias Geier
7bb1da969a fix copy-paste error: non-const -> const 2018-08-28 23:23:13 +02:00
Wenzel Jakob
d4b37a284a added py::ellipsis() method for slicing of multidimensional NumPy arrays
This PR adds a new py::ellipsis() method which can be used in
conjunction with NumPy's generalized slicing support. For instance,
the following is now valid (where "a" is a NumPy array):

py::array b = a[py::make_tuple(0, py::ellipsis(), 0)];
2018-08-28 23:22:55 +02:00
Wenzel Jakob
cbd16a8247
stl.h: propagate return value policies to type-specific casters (#1455)
* stl.h: propagate return value policies to type-specific casters

Return value policies for containers like those handled in in 'stl.h'
are currently broken.

The problem is that detail::return_value_policy_override<C>::policy()
always returns 'move' when given a non-pointer/reference type, e.g.
'std::vector<...>'.

This is sensible behavior for custom types that are exposed via
'py::class_<>', but it does not make sense for types that are handled by
other type casters (STL containers, Eigen matrices, etc.).

This commit changes the behavior so that
detail::return_value_policy_override only becomes active when the type
caster derives from type_caster_generic.

Furthermore, the override logic is called recursively in STL type
casters to enable key/value-specific behavior.
2018-07-17 16:56:26 +02:00
Yannick Jadoul
b4719a60d3 Switching deprecated Thread Local Storage (TLS) usage in Python 3.7 to Thread Specific Storage (TSS) (#1454)
* Switching deprecated Thread Local Storage (TLS) usage in Python 3.7 to Thread Specific Storage (TSS)

* Changing Python version from 3.6 to 3.7 for Travis CI, to match brew's version of Python 3

* Introducing PYBIND11_ macros to switch between TLS and TSS API
2018-07-17 16:55:52 +02:00
Dennis Luxen
221fb1e11e Untangle cast logic to not implicitly require castability (#1442)
The current code requires implicitly that integral types are cast-able to floating point. In case of strongly-typed integrals (e.g. as explained at http://www.ilikebigbits.com/blog/2014/5/6/type-safe-identifiers-in-c) this is not always the case.

This commit uses SFINAE to move the numeric conversions into separate `cast()` implementations to avoid the issue.
2018-07-17 10:48:51 -03:00
Antony Lee
baf6b99004 Silence GCC8's -Wcast-function-type. (#1396)
* Silence GCC8's -Wcast-function-type.

See https://bugs.python.org/issue33012 and PRs linked therein.
2018-06-24 15:38:09 +02:00
Khachajantc Michael
e3cb2a674a Use std::addressof to obtain holder address instead of operator& 2018-06-23 21:29:54 -03:00
Antony Lee
58e551cc73 Properly report exceptions thrown during module initialization.
If an exception is thrown during module initialization, the
error_already_set destructor will try to call `get_internals()` *after*
setting Python's error indicator, resulting in a `SystemError: ...
returned with an error set`.

Fix that by temporarily stashing away the error indicator in the
destructor.
2018-06-15 10:56:50 -03:00
Naotoshi Seo
5ef1af138d Fix SEGV to create empty shaped numpy array (#1371)
Fix a segfault when creating a 0-dimension, c-strides array.
2018-05-06 10:59:25 -03:00
luzpaz
4b874616b2 Misc. typos (#1384)
Found via `codespell`
2018-05-06 10:54:10 -03:00
Lori A. Burns
bdbe8d0bde Enforces intel icpc >= 2017, fixes #1121 (#1363) 2018-04-29 13:48:25 +02:00
Wenzel Jakob
ed67005583
Minor fix for MSVC warning CS4459 (#1374)
When using pybind11 to bind enums on MSVC and warnings (/W4) enabled,
the following warning pollutes builds. This fix renames one of the
occurrences.

pybind11\include\pybind11\pybind11.h(1398): warning C4459: declaration of 'self' hides global declaration
pybind11\include\pybind11\operators.h(41): note: see declaration of 'pybind11::detail::self'
2018-04-22 14:04:31 +02:00
oremanj
fd9bc8f54d Add basic support for tag-based static polymorphism (#1326)
* Add basic support for tag-based static polymorphism

Sometimes it is possible to look at a C++ object and know what its dynamic type is,
even if it doesn't use C++ polymorphism, because instances of the object and its
subclasses conform to some other mechanism for being self-describing; for example,
perhaps there's an enumerated "tag" or "kind" member in the base class that's always
set to an indication of the correct type. This might be done for performance reasons,
or to permit most-derived types to be trivially copyable. One of the most widely-known
examples is in LLVM: https://llvm.org/docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.html

This PR permits pybind11 to be informed of such conventions via a new specializable
detail::polymorphic_type_hook<> template, which generalizes the previous logic for
determining the runtime type of an object based on C++ RTTI. Implementors provide
a way to map from a base class object to a const std::type_info* for the dynamic
type; pybind11 then uses this to ensure that casting a Base* to Python creates a
Python object that knows it's wrapping the appropriate sort of Derived.

There are a number of restrictions with this tag-based static polymorphism support
compared to pybind11's existing support for built-in C++ polymorphism:

- there is no support for this-pointer adjustment, so only single inheritance is permitted
- there is no way to make C++ code call new Python-provided subclasses
- when binding C++ classes that redefine a method in a subclass, the .def() must be
  repeated in the binding for Python to know about the update

But these are not much of an issue in practice in many cases, the impact on the
complexity of pybind11's innards is minimal and localized, and the support for
automatic downcasting improves usability a great deal.
2018-04-14 02:13:10 +02:00
Boris Staletic
289e5d9cc2 Implement an enum_ property "name"
The property returns the enum_ value as a string.
For example:

>>> import module
>>> module.enum.VALUE
enum.VALUE
>>> str(module.enum.VALUE)
'enum.VALUE'
>>> module.enum.VALUE.name
'VALUE'

This is actually the equivalent of Boost.Python "name" property.
2018-04-07 19:11:35 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
6862cb9b35 Add workaround for clang 3.3/3.4
As reported in #1349, clang before 3.5 can segfault on a function-local
variable referenced inside a lambda.  This moves the function-local
static into a separate function that the lambda can invoke to avoid the
issue.

Fixes #1349
2018-04-05 12:01:39 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
6d0b4708c6 Reimplement version check and combine init macros
This reimplements the version check to avoid sscanf (which has
reportedly started throwing warnings under MSVC, even when used
perfectly safely -- #1314).  It also extracts the mostly duplicated
parts of PYBIND11_MODULE/PYBIND11_PLUGIN into separate macros.
2018-03-11 11:10:06 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
9f41c8eade Fix class name in overload failure message 2018-03-10 14:24:23 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
e88656ab45 Improve macro type handling for types with commas
- PYBIND11_MAKE_OPAQUE now takes ... rather than a single argument and
  expands it with __VA_ARGS__; this lets templated, comma-containing
  types get through correctly.
- Adds a new macro PYBIND11_TYPE() that lets you pass the type into a
  macro as a single argument, such as:

      PYBIND11_OVERLOAD(PYBIND11_TYPE(R<1,2>), PYBIND11_TYPE(C<3,4>), func)

  Unfortunately this only works for one macro call: to forward the
  argument on to the next macro call (without the processor breaking it
  up again) requires also adding the PYBIND11_TYPE(...) to type macro
  arguments in the PYBIND11_OVERLOAD_... macro chain.
- updated the documentation with these two changes, and use them at a couple
  places in the test suite to test that they work.
2018-03-10 14:24:23 -04:00
Wenzel Jakob
ff6bd092d4
Fix pybind11 interoperability with Clang trunk (#1269) 2018-02-06 15:40:50 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander
add56ccdca MSVC workaround for broken using detail::_ warning 2018-01-12 12:37:54 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
657a51e889 Remove unnecessary detail::
This function already has a `using namespace detail`, so all the
`detail::` qualifications are not needed.
2018-01-12 12:06:46 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
adbc8111bc Use stricter brace initialization
This updates the `py::init` constructors to only use brace
initialization for aggregate initiailization if there is no constructor
with the given arguments.

This, in particular, fixes the regression in #1247 where the presence of
a `std::initializer_list<T>` constructor started being invoked for
constructor invocations in 2.2 even when there was a specific
constructor of the desired type.

The added test case demonstrates: without this change, it fails to
compile because the `.def(py::init<std::vector<int>>())` constructor
tries to invoke the `T(std::initializer_list<std::vector<int>>)`
constructor rather than the `T(std::vector<int>)` constructor.

By only using `new T{...}`-style construction when a `T(...)`
constructor doesn't exist, we should bypass this by while still allowing
`py::init<...>` to be used for aggregate type initialization (since such
types, by definition, don't have a user-declared constructor).
2018-01-12 09:29:57 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
326deef2ae
Fix segfault when reloading interpreter with external modules (#1092)
* Fix segfault when reloading interpreter with external modules

When embedding the interpreter and loading external modules in that
embedded interpreter, the external module correctly shares its
internals_ptr with the one in the embedded interpreter.  When the
interpreter is shut down, however, only the `internals_ptr` local to
the embedded code is actually reset to nullptr: the external module
remains set.

The result is that loading an external pybind11 module, letting the
interpreter go through a finalize/initialize, then attempting to use
something in the external module fails because this external module is
still trying to use the old (destroyed) internals.  This causes
undefined behaviour (typically a segfault).

This commit fixes it by adding a level of indirection in the internals
path, converting the local internals variable to `internals **` instead
of `internals *`.  With this change, we can detect a stale internals
pointer and reload the internals pointer (either from a capsule or by
creating a new internals instance).

(No issue number: this was reported on gitter by @henryiii and @aoloe).
2018-01-11 19:46:10 -04:00
Jeff VanOss
05d379a9aa fix return from std::map bindings to __delitem__ (#1229)
Fix return from `std::map` bindings to `__delitem__`: we should be returning `void`, not an iterator.

Also adds a test for map item deletion.
2018-01-11 19:43:37 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
507da4181d Use a named rather than anon struct in instance
The anonymous struct nested in a union triggers a -Wnested-anon-type
warning ("anonymous types declared in an anonymous union are an
extension") under clang (#1204).  This names the struct and defines it
out of the definition of `instance` to get around to warning (and makes
the code slightly simpler).
2018-01-11 16:38:45 -04:00
Antony Lee
0826b3c106 Add spaces around "=" in signature repr.
PEP8 indicates (correctly, IMO) that when an annotation is present, the
signature should include spaces around the equal sign, i.e.

    def f(x: int = 1): ...

instead of

    def f(x: int=1): ...

(in the latter case the equal appears to bind to the type, not to the
argument).

pybind11 signatures always includes a type annotation so we can always
add the spaces.
2017-12-27 11:04:24 -04:00
Ivan Smirnov
d1db2ccfdf Make register_dtype() accept any field containers (#1225)
* Make register_dtype() accept any field containers

* Add a test for programmatic dtype registration
2017-12-27 11:00:27 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
367d723a54 Simplify arg copying 2017-12-23 18:53:26 -04:00
Zach DeVito
03874e3738 Fix leak in var arg handling
When using the mixed position + vararg path, pybind over inc_ref's
the vararg positions. Printing the ref_count() of `item` before
and after this change you see:

Before change:

```
refcount of item before assign 3
refcount of item after assign 5
```

After change
```
refcount of item before assign 3
refcount of item after assign 4
```
2017-12-23 18:53:26 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
48e1f9aadc Fix premature destruction of args/kwargs arguments
The `py::args` or `py::kwargs` arguments aren't properly referenced
when added to the function_call arguments list: their reference counts
drop to zero if the first (non-converting) function call fails, which
means they might be cleaned up before the second pass call runs.

This commit adds a couple of extra `object`s to the `function_call`
where we can stash a reference to them when needed to tie their
lifetime to the function_call object's lifetime.

(Credit to YannickJadoul for catching and proposing a fix in #1223).
2017-12-23 16:42:22 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
3be401f2a2 Silence new MSVC C++17 deprecation warnings
In the latest MSVC in C++17 mode including Eigen causes warnings:

    warning C4996: 'std::unary_negate<_Fn>': warning STL4008: std::not1(),
    std::not2(), std::unary_negate, and std::binary_negate are deprecated in
    C++17. They are superseded by std::not_fn(). You can define
    _SILENCE_CXX17_NEGATORS_DEPRECATION_WARNING or
    _SILENCE_ALL_CXX17_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS to acknowledge that you have
    received this warning.

This disables 4996 for the Eigen includes.

Catch generates a similar warning for std::uncaught_exception, so
disable the warning there, too.

In both cases this is temporary; we can (and should) remove the warnings
disabling once new upstream versions of Eigen and Catch are available
that address the warning. (The Catch one, in particular, looks to be
fixed in upstream master, so will probably be fixed in the next (2.0.2)
release).
2017-12-23 09:00:45 -04:00
Antony Lee
a303c6fc47 Remove spurious quote in error message. (#1202) 2017-12-04 03:17:16 +01:00
Henry Schreiner
cf0d0f9d5a Matching Python 2 int behavior on Python 2 (#1186)
Pybind11's default conversion to int always produces a long on Python 2 (`int`s and `long`s were unified in Python 3). This patch fixes `int` handling to match Python 2 on Python 2; for short types (`size_t` or smaller), the number will be returned as an `int` if possible, otherwise `long`. Requires Python 2.5+.

This is needed for things like `sys.exit`, which refuse to accept a `long`.
2017-11-30 13:33:24 -04:00
Francesco Biscani
ba33b2fc79 Add -Wdeprecated to test suite and fix associated warnings (#1191)
This commit turns on `-Wdeprecated` in the test suite and fixes several
associated deprecation warnings that show up as a result:

- in C++17 `static constexpr` members are implicitly inline; our
  redeclaration (needed for C++11/14) is deprecated in C++17.

- various test suite classes have destructors and rely on implicit copy
  constructors, but implicit copy constructor definitions when a
  user-declared destructor is present was deprecated in C++11.

- Eigen also has various implicit copy constructors, so just disable
  `-Wdeprecated` in `eigen.h`.
2017-11-22 17:37:41 -04:00
Wenzel Jakob
6d19036cb2
support docstrings in enum::value() (#1160) 2017-11-16 22:24:36 +01:00
Ted Drain
0a0758ce3a Added write only property functions for issue #1142 (#1144)
py::class_<T>'s `def_property` and `def_property_static` can now take a
`nullptr` as the getter to allow a write-only property to be established
(mirroring Python's `property()` built-in when `None` is given for the
getter).

This also updates properties to use the new nullptr constructor internally.
2017-11-07 12:35:27 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
71178922fd
__qualname__ and nested class naming fixes (#1171)
A few fixes related to how we set `__qualname__` and how we show the
type name in function signatures:

- `__qualname__` isn't supposed to have the module name at the
beginning, but we've been putting it there.  This removes it, while
keeping the `Nested.Class` name chaining.

- print `__module__.__qualname__` rather than `type->tp_name`; the
latter doesn't work properly for nested classes, so we would get
`module.B` rather than `module.A.B` for a class `B` with parent `A`.
This also unifies the Python 3 and PyPy code.  Fixes #1166.

- This now sets a `__qualname__` attribute on the type (as would happen
in Python 3.3+) for Python <3.3, including PyPy.  While not particularly
important to have in earlier Python versions, it's useful for us to be
able to extracted the nested name, which is why `__qualname__` was
invented in the first place.

- Added tests for the above.
2017-11-07 12:33:05 -04:00
Unknown
0b3f44ebdf Trivial typos
Non-user facing. 
Found using `codespell -q 3`
2017-11-01 22:48:36 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
32ef69acde Qualify cast_op_type to help ICC 2017-10-24 17:59:50 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
a582d6c7ff Build /permissive- under VS2017
Building with the (VS2017) /permissive- flag puts the compiler into
stricter standards-compliant mode.  It shouldn't cause the compiler to
work differently--it just disallows some non-conforming code--so should
be perfectly fine for the test suite under all VS2017 builds.

This commit also fixes one failure under non-permissive mode.
2017-10-22 13:33:58 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
6a81dbbb1e Fix 2D Nx1/1xN inputs to eigen dense vector args
This fixes a bug introduced in b68959e822
when passing in a two-dimensional, but conformable, array as the value
for a compile-time Eigen vector (such as VectorXd or RowVectorXd).  The
commit switched to using numpy to copy into the eigen data, but this
broke the described case because numpy refuses to broadcast a (N,1)
into a (N).

This commit fixes it by squeezing the input array whenever the output
array is 1-dimensional, which will let the problematic case through.
(This shouldn't squeeze inappropriately as dimension compatibility is
already checked for conformability before getting to the copy code).
2017-10-12 09:45:55 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
7672292e6b Add informative compilation failure for method_adaptor failures
When using `method_adaptor` (usually implicitly via a `cl.def("f",
&D::f)`) a compilation failure results if `f` is actually a method of
an inaccessible base class made public via `using`, such as:

    class B { public: void f() {} };
    class D : private B { public: using B::f; };

pybind deduces `&D::f` as a `B` member function pointer.  Since the base
class is inaccessible, the cast in `method_adaptor` from a base class
member function pointer to derived class member function pointer isn't
valid, and a cast failure results.

This was sort of a regression in 2.2, which introduced `method_adaptor`
to do the expected thing when the base class *is* accessible.  It wasn't
actually something that *worked* in 2.1, though: you wouldn't get a
compile-time failure, but the method was not callable (because the `D *`
couldn't be cast to a `B *` because of the access restriction).  As a
result, you'd simply get a run-time failure if you ever tried to call
the function (this is what #855 fixed).

Thus the change in 2.2 essentially promoted a run-time failure to a
compile-time failure, so isn't really a regression.

This commit simply adds a `static_assert` with an accessible-base-class
check so that, rather than just a cryptic cast failure, you get
something more informative (along with a suggestion for a workaround).

The workaround is to use a lambda, e.g.:

    class Derived : private Base {
    public:
        using Base::f;
    };

    // In binding code:
    //cl.def("f", &Derived::f); // fails: &Derived::f is actually a base
                                // class member function pointer
    cl.def("f", [](Derived &self) { return self.f(); });

This is a bit of a nuissance (especially if there are a bunch of
arguments to forward), but I don't really see another solution.

Fixes #1124
2017-10-12 09:45:07 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
1b08df5872 Fix char & arguments being non-bindable
This changes the caster to return a reference to a (new) local `CharT`
type caster member so that binding lvalue-reference char arguments
works (currently it results in a compilation failure).

Fixes #1116
2017-10-12 09:41:54 -04:00
Bruce Merry
1e6172d405 Fix some minor mistakes in comments on struct instance 2017-10-08 07:03:52 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
c6a57c10d1 Fix dtype string leak
`PyArray_DescrConverter_` doesn't steal a reference to the argument,
and so the passed arguments shouldn't be `.release()`d.
2017-09-19 23:16:45 -03:00