Commit Graph

742 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jason Rhinelander
897d71687e Combine std::tuple/std::pair logic
The std::pair caster can be written as a special case of the std::tuple
caster; this combines them via a base `tuple_caster` class (which is
essentially identical to the previous std::tuple caster).

This also removes the special empty tuple base case: returning an empty
tuple is relatively rare, and the base case still works perfectly well
even when the tuple types is an empty list.
2017-07-05 12:27:14 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
23bf894590 Override deduced Base class when defining Derived methods
When defining method from a member function pointer (e.g. `.def("f",
&Derived::f)`) we run into a problem if `&Derived::f` is actually
implemented in some base class `Base` when `Base` isn't
pybind-registered.

This happens because the class type is deduced from the member function
pointer, which then becomes a lambda with first argument this deduced
type.  For a base class implementation, the deduced type is `Base`, not
`Derived`, and so we generate and registered an overload which takes a
`Base *` as first argument.  Trying to call this fails if `Base` isn't
registered (e.g.  because it's an implementation detail class that isn't
intended to be exposed to Python) because the type caster for an
unregistered type always fails.

This commit adds a `method_adaptor` function that rebinds a member
function to a derived type member function and otherwise (i.e. regular
functions/lambda) leaves the argument as-is.  This is now used for class
definitions so that they are bound with type being registered rather
than a potential base type.

A closely related fix in this commit is to similarly update the lambdas
used for `def_readwrite` (and related) to bind to the class type being
registered rather than the deduced type so that registering a property
that resolves to a base class member similarly generates a usable
function.

Fixes #854, #910.

Co-Authored-By: Dean Moldovan <dean0x7d@gmail.com>
2017-07-03 17:28:45 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
259b2fafea Fix unsigned error value casting
When casting to an unsigned type from a python 2 `int`, we currently
cast using `(unsigned long long) PyLong_AsUnsignedLong(src.ptr())`.
If the Python cast fails, it returns (unsigned long) -1, but then we
cast this to `unsigned long long`, which means we get 4294967295, but
because that isn't equal to `(unsigned long long) -1`, we don't detect
the failure.

This commit moves the unsigned casting into a `detail::as_unsigned`
function which, upon error, casts -1 to the final type, and otherwise
casts the return value to the final type to avoid the problematic double
cast when an error occurs.

The error most commonly shows up wherever `long` is 32-bits (e.g. under
both 32- and 64-bit Windows, and under 32-bit linux) when passing a
negative value to a bound function taking an `unsigned long`.

Fixes #929.

The added tests also trigger a latent segfault under PyPy: when casting
to an integer smaller than `long` (e.g. casting to a `uint32_t` on a
64-bit `long` architecture) we check both for a Python error and also
that the resulting intermediate value will fit in the final type.  If
there is no conversion error, but we get a value that would overflow, we
end up calling `PyErr_ExceptionMatches()` illegally: that call is only
allowed when there is a current exception.  Under PyPy, this segfaults
the test suite.  It doesn't appear to segfault under CPython, but the
documentation suggests that it *could* do so.  The fix is to only check
for the exception match if we actually got an error.
2017-07-02 15:27:51 -04:00
Dean Moldovan
30f6c3b36e Fix indirect loading of Eigen::Ref
Put the caster's temporary array on life support to ensure correct
lifetime when it's being used as a subcaster.
2017-06-29 11:31:54 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
af2dda38ef Add a life support system for type_caster temporaries 2017-06-29 11:31:54 +02:00
Bruce Merry
9d698f7fcc Hold strong references to keep_alive patients
This fixes #856. Instead of the weakref trick, the internals structure
holds an unordered_map from PyObject* to a vector of references. To
avoid the cost of the unordered_map lookup for objects that don't have
any keep_alive patients, a flag is added to each instance to indicate
whether there is anything to do.
2017-06-24 12:59:46 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
2196696746 Use std::type_info::name() for type lookups outside stdlibc++
Using `std::type_info::operator==` fails under libc++ because the .so
is loaded with RTLD_LOCAL.  libc++ considers types under such .sos
distinct, and so comparing typeid() values directly isn't going to work.

This adds a custom hasher and equality class for the type lookup maps
when not under stdlibc++, and adds a `detail::same_type` function to
perform the equality test.  It also converts a few pointer arguments to
const lvalue references, particularly since doing the pointer
comparison wasn't technically valid to being with (though in practice,
appeared to work everywhere).

This fixes #912.
2017-06-24 10:46:33 -03:00
Dean Moldovan
2d6116b53f Fix GIL release and acquire when embedding the interpreter
Fixes a race condition when multiple threads try to acquire the GIL
before `detail::internals` have been initialized. `gil_scoped_release`
is now tasked with initializing `internals` (guaranteed single-threaded)
to ensure the safety of subsequent `acquire` calls from multiple threads.
2017-06-24 14:03:42 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
f42af24a7d Support std::string_view when compiled under C++17 2017-06-24 03:24:56 -03:00
Dean Moldovan
ce7024fdf5 Fix linker issue with move constructors on MSVC
Fixes the issue as described in the comments of commit e27ea47. This
just adds `enable_if_t<std::is_move_constructible<T>::value>` to
`make_move_constructor`. The change fixes MSVC and is harmless with
other compilers.
2017-06-24 00:10:09 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
24dec80b44 Help CLion IDE evaluate PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE
CLion slows to a crawl when evaluating the intricate `PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE`
macro. This commit replaces the macro cascade with a simple `(void)0`
to ease IDE evaluation.
2017-06-23 12:56:15 +02:00
Philip Austin
13d8cd2cc7 add the capsule name to the py::capsule constructor
This allows named capsules to be constructed with `py::capsule`.
2017-06-15 10:45:11 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
e45c211497 Support multiple inheritance from python
This commit allows multiple inheritance of pybind11 classes from
Python, e.g.

    class MyType(Base1, Base2):
        def __init__(self):
            Base1.__init__(self)
            Base2.__init__(self)

where Base1 and Base2 are pybind11-exported classes.

This requires collapsing the various builtin base objects
(pybind11_object_56, ...) introduced in 2.1 into a single
pybind11_object of a fixed size; this fixed size object allocates enough
space to contain either a simple object (one base class & small* holder
instance), or a pointer to a new allocation that can contain an
arbitrary number of base classes and holders, with holder size
unrestricted.

* "small" here means having a sizeof() of at most 2 pointers, which is
enough to fit unique_ptr (sizeof is 1 ptr) and shared_ptr (sizeof is 2
ptrs).

To minimize the performance impact, this repurposes
`internals::registered_types_py` to store a vector of pybind-registered
base types.  For direct-use pybind types (e.g. the `PyA` for a C++ `A`)
this is simply storing the same thing as before, but now in a vector;
for Python-side inherited types, the map lets us avoid having to do a
base class traversal as long as we've seen the class before.  The
change to vector is needed for multiple inheritance: Python types
inheriting from multiple registered bases have one entry per base.
2017-06-12 09:56:55 -03:00
Dean Moldovan
caedf74a89 Fix py::make_iterator's __next__() for past-the-end calls
Fixes #896.

From Python docs: "Once an iterator’s `__next__()` method raises
`StopIteration`, it must continue to do so on subsequent calls.
Implementations that do not obey this property are deemed broken."
2017-06-10 16:44:21 +02:00
Ben Frederickson
74b501cd85 Fix passing in utf8 encoded strings with python 2
Passing utf8 encoded strings from python to a C++ function taking a
std::string was broken.  The previous version was trying to call
'PyUnicode_FromObject' on this data, which failed to convert the string
to unicode with the default ascii codec. Also this incurs an unnecessary
conversion to unicode for data this is immediately converted back to
utf8.

Fix by treating python 2 strings the same python 3 bytes objects, and just
copying over the data if possible.
2017-06-10 10:10:33 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
0365d491b5 Remove feature macro for <experimental/optional>
libc++ 3.8 (and possibly others--including the derived version on OS X),
doesn't define the macro, but does support std::experimental::optional.
This removes the extra macro check and just assumes the header existing
is enough, which is what we do for <optional> and <variant>.
2017-06-08 18:34:48 -03:00
Dean Moldovan
e27ea47c87 Enable detection of private operator new on MSVC
MSVC 2015 Update 3 and 2017 can handle enough expression SFINAE
to make this work now.
2017-06-08 21:54:55 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
4edb1ce20c Destroy internals if created during Py_Finalize()
Py_Finalize could potentially invoke code that calls `get_internals()`,
which could create a new internals object if one didn't exist.
`finalize_interpreter()` didn't catch this because it only used the
pre-finalize interpreter pointer status; if this happens, it results in
the internals pointer not being properly destroyed with the interpreter,
which leaks, and also causes a `get_internals()` under a future
interpreter to return an internals object that is wrong in various ways.
2017-06-08 16:42:06 -03:00
Dean Moldovan
1d3c4bc54d Fix missing default globals in eval/exec when embedding
Fixes #887.
2017-06-07 11:44:30 +02:00
eirrgang
91bbe2f2e5 Explicitly define copy/move constructors for accessor
`accessor` currently relies on an implicit default copy constructor, but that is deprecated in C++11 when a copy assignment operator is present and can, in some cases, raise deprecation warnings (see #888).  This commit explicitly specifies the default copy constructor and also adds a default move constructor.
2017-06-06 12:57:17 -03:00
Jason Rhinelander
acedd6c70c std::reference_wrapper: non-generic types; no None
This reimplements the std::reference_wrapper<T> caster to be a shell
around the underlying T caster (rather than assuming T is a generic
type), which lets it work for things like `std::reference_wrapper<int>`
or anything else custom type caster with a lvalue cast operator.

This also makes it properly fail when None is provided, just as an
ordinary lvalue reference argument would similarly fail.

This also adds a static assert to test that T has an appropriate type
caster.  It triggers for casters like `std::pair`, which have
return-by-value cast operators.  (In theory this could be supported by
storing a local temporary for such types, but that's beyond the scope
of this PR).

This also replaces `automatic` or `take_ownership` return value policies
with `automatic_reference` as taking ownership of a reference inside a
reference_wrapper is not valid.
2017-05-30 13:14:49 -04:00
Dean Moldovan
443ab5946b Replace PYBIND11_PLUGIN with PYBIND11_MODULE
This commit also adds `doc()` to `object_api` as a shortcut for the
`attr("__doc__")` accessor.

The module macro changes from:
```c++
PYBIND11_PLUGIN(example) {
    pybind11::module m("example", "pybind11 example plugin");
    m.def("add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; });
    return m.ptr();
}
```

to:

```c++
PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) {
    m.doc() = "pybind11 example plugin";
    m.def("add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; });
}
```

Using the old macro results in a deprecation warning. The warning
actually points to the `pybind11_init` function (since attributes
don't bind to macros), but the message should be quite clear:
"PYBIND11_PLUGIN is deprecated, use PYBIND11_MODULE".
2017-05-29 03:21:19 +02:00
Yannick Jadoul
b700c5d672 Convenience constructor templates for buffer_info (#860)
* Added template constructors to buffer_info that can deduce the item size, format string, and number of dimensions from the pointer type and the shape container

* Implemented actual buffer_info constructor as private delegate constructor taking rvalue reference as a workaround for the evaluation order move problem on GCC 4.8
2017-05-29 03:13:55 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
427e4afc69 Fix buffer protocol inheritance
Fixes #878.
2017-05-29 02:03:58 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
931b9e93ab Support restarting the interpreter and subinterpreters 2017-05-28 02:12:24 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
22c413b196 Add C++ interface for the Python interpreter 2017-05-28 02:12:24 +02:00
Bruce Merry
46dbee7d42 Avoid explicitly resetting a std::[experimental::]optional
Now that #851 has removed all multiple uses of a caster, it can just use
the default-constructed value with needing a reset. This fixes two
issues:

1. With std::experimental::optional (at least under GCC 5.4), the `= {}`
would construct an instance of the optional type and then move-assign
it, which fails if the value type isn't move-assignable.

2. With older versions of Boost, the `= {}` could fail because it is
ambiguous, allowing construction of either `boost::none` or the value
type.
2017-05-27 23:52:23 +02:00
Bruce Merry
eee4f4fc7e Fix invalid memory access in vector insert method
The stl_bind.h wrapper for `Vector.insert` neglected to do a bounds
check.
2017-05-25 10:51:28 -04:00
Bruce Merry
6a0f6c40cd Fix quadratic-time behaviour of vector extend
The "extend" method for vectors defined in stl_bind.h used `reserve` to
allocate space for the extra growth. While this can sometimes make a
constant-factor improvement in performance, it can also cause
construction of a vector by repeated extension to take quadratic rather
than linear time, as memory is reallocated in small increments rather
than on an exponential schedule. For example, this Python code would
take time proportional to the square of the trip count:

```python
a = VectorInt([1, 2, 3])
b = VectorInt()
for i in range(100000):
    b.extend(a)
```

This commit removes the `reserve` call. The alternative would be to try
to add some smarter heuristics, but the standard library may well have
its own heuristics (the iterators are random access iterators, so it can
easily determine the number of items being added) and trying to add more
heuristics on top of that seems like a bad idea.
2017-05-25 10:49:04 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
f3ce00eaed vectorize: pass-through of non-vectorizable args
This extends py::vectorize to automatically pass through
non-vectorizable arguments.  This removes the need for the documented
"explicitly exclude an argument" workaround.

Vectorization now applies to arithmetic, std::complex, and POD types,
passed as plain value or by const lvalue reference (previously only
pass-by-value types were supported).  Non-const lvalue references and
any other types are passed through as-is.

Functions with rvalue reference arguments (whether vectorizable or not)
are explicitly prohibited: an rvalue reference is inherently not
something that can be passed multiple times and is thus unsuitable to
being in a vectorized function.

The vectorize returned value is also now more sensitive to inputs:
previously it would return by value when all inputs are of size 1; this
is now amended to having all inputs of size 1 *and* 0 dimensions.  Thus
if you pass in, for example, [[1]], you get back a 1x1, 2D array, while
previously you got back just the resulting single value.

Vectorization of member function specializations is now also supported
via `py::vectorize(&Class::method)`; this required passthrough support
for the initial object pointer on the wrapping function pointer.
2017-05-24 20:43:41 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
41f8da4a95 array_t: make c_style/f_style work for array creation
Currently if you construct an `array_t<T, array::f_style>` with a shape
but not strides you get a C-style array; the only way to get F-style
strides was to calculate the strides manually.  This commit fixes that
by adding logic to use f_style strides when the flag is set.

This also simplifies the existing c_style stride logic.
2017-05-24 20:43:41 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
129a7256a9 Add and use detail::remove_reference_t
Adds `remove_reference_t` and converts various `typename
std::remove_reference<...>::type` to using it.
2017-05-24 20:43:41 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
926e2cf333 Add PYBIND11_EXPAND_SIDE_EFFECTS macro
This allows calling of functions (typically void) over a parameter
pack, replacing usage such as:

    bool unused[] = { (voidfunc(param_pack_arg), false)..., false };
    (void) unused;

with a much cleaner:

    PYBIND11_EXPAND_SIDE_EFFECTS(voidfunc(param_pack_arg));
2017-05-24 20:43:41 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
4e1e4a580e Allow py::arg().none(false) argument attribute
This attribute lets you disable (or explicitly enable) passing None to
an argument that otherwise would allow it by accepting
a value by raw pointer or shared_ptr.
2017-05-24 13:10:57 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
813d7e8687 Add movable cast support to type casters
This commit allows type_casters to allow their local values to be moved
away, rather than copied, when the type caster instance itself is an rvalue.

This only applies (automatically) to type casters using
PYBIND11_TYPE_CASTER; the generic type type casters don't own their own
pointer, and various value casters (e.g. std::string, std::pair,
arithmetic types) already cast to an rvalue (i.e. they return by value).

This updates various calling code to attempt to get a movable value
whenever the value is itself coming from a type caster about to be
destroyed: for example, when constructing an std::pair or various stl.h
containers.  For types that don't support value moving, the cast_op
falls back to an lvalue cast.

There wasn't an obvious place to add the tests, so I added them to
test_copy_move_policies, but also renamed it to drop the _policies as it
now tests more than just policies.
2017-05-24 13:09:31 -04:00
Bruce Merry
fe0cf8b73b Support pointers to member functions in def_buffer.
Closes #857, by adding overloads to def_buffer that match pointers to
member functions and wrap them in lambdas.
2017-05-22 17:53:37 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
37b2383a64 Style cleanup of javadoc-style comments
This changes javadoc-style documenting comments from:

    /** Text starts here
     * and continues here
     */

to:

    /**
     * Test starts here
     * and continues here
     */

which looks a little better, and also matches the javadoc-recommended
way of writing documenting comments.
2017-05-22 12:06:16 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
b8ac438386 Use dynamic cast for shared_from_this holder init
Using a dynamic_cast instead of a static_cast is needed to safely cast
from a base to a derived type.  The previous static_pointer_cast isn't
safe, however, when downcasting (and fails to compile when downcasting
with virtual inheritance).

Switching this to always use a dynamic_pointer_cast shouldn't incur any
additional overhead when a static_pointer_cast is safe (i.e. when
upcasting, or self-casting): compilers don't need RTTI checks in those
cases.
2017-05-22 11:43:21 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
35998a0314 Define both __div__ and __truediv__ for Python 2
Python 2 requires both `__div__` and `__truediv__` (and variants) for
compatibility with both regular Python 2 and Python 2 under `from
__future__ import division`.  Without both, division fails in one or the
other case.
2017-05-21 19:15:25 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
1ac51a02f7 Minor operators.h style cleanups
- realign \ at end of macro lines
- use 'using A = B;' rather than 'typedef B A;'
- use conditional_t
2017-05-21 19:15:25 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
acad05cb13 Fix /= operator under Python 3
The Python method for /= was set as `__idiv__`, which should be
`__itruediv__` under Python 3.

This wasn't totally broken in that without it defined, Python constructs
a new object by calling __truediv__.  The operator tests, however,
didn't actually test the /= operator: when I added it, I saw an extra
construction, leading to the problem.  This commit also includes tests
for the previously untested *= operator, and adds some element-wise
vector multiplication and division operators.
2017-05-21 19:15:25 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
d2da33a34a static_assert should be testing ssize_t not size_t
The numpy strides/sizes/etc. are signed now, but the static_assert
didn't get updated to match.
2017-05-20 11:40:40 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
a4d0d95e2e Make static internals ptr pybind version specific
Under gcc, the `static internals *internals_ptr` is shared across .so's,
which breaks for obvious reasons.

This commit fixes it by moving the static pointer declaration into a
pybind-version-templated function.
2017-05-18 12:40:26 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
731a9f6cea Fix Py_buffer leak on GetBuffer failure
Fixes #852.
2017-05-16 09:38:58 -04:00
Dean Moldovan
4567f1f82a Fix Eigen shape assertion error in dense matrix caster
Missing conformability check was causing Eigen to create a 0x0 matrix
with an error in debug mode and silent corruption in release mode.
2017-05-11 16:10:40 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
94d0a9f7bc Improve constructor resolution in variant_caster
Currently, `py::int_(1).cast<variant<double, int>>()` fills the `double`
slot of the variant. This commit switches the loader to a 2-pass scheme
in order to correctly fill the `int` slot.
2017-05-10 17:47:57 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
93e3eac6f9 Defer None loading to second pass
Many of our `is_none()` checks in type caster loading return true, but
this should really be considered a deferral so that, for example, an
overload with a `py::none` argument would win over one that takes
`py::none` as a null option.

This keeps None-accepting for the `!convert` pass only for std::optional
and void casters.  (The `char` caster already deferred None; this just
extends that behaviour to other casters).
2017-05-10 10:44:19 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
7fb01ecd9c Fix gcc 7 warning
Under gcc 7 with -std=c++11, compilation results in several of the
following warnings:

    In file included from /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/tests/test_sequences_and_iterators.cpp:13:0:
    /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/operators.h: In function ‘pybind11::detail::op_<(pybind11::detail::op_id)0, (pybind11::detail::op_type)0, pybind11::detail::self_t, pybind11::detail::self_t> pybind11::detail::operator+(const pybind11::detail::self_t&, const pybind11::detail::self_t&)’:
    /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/operators.h:78:76: warning: inline declaration of ‘pybind11::detail::op_<(pybind11::detail::op_id)0, (pybind11::detail::op_type)0, pybind11::detail::self_t, pybind11::detail::self_t> pybind11::detail::operator+(const pybind11::detail::self_t&, const pybind11::detail::self_t&)’ follows declaration with attribute noinline [-Wattributes]
     inline op_<op_##id, op_l, self_t, self_t> op(const self_t &, const self_t &) {         \
                                                                                ^
    /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/operators.h:109:1: note: in expansion of macro ‘PYBIND11_BINARY_OPERATOR’
     PYBIND11_BINARY_OPERATOR(add,       radd,         operator+,    l + r)
     ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    In file included from /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/cast.h:15:0,
                     from /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/attr.h:13,
                     from /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/pybind11.h:36,
                     from /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/tests/pybind11_tests.h:2,
                     from /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/tests/test_sequences_and_iterators.cpp:11:
    /home/jagerman/src/pybind11/include/pybind11/descr.h:116:36: note: previous definition of ‘pybind11::detail::descr pybind11::detail::operator+(pybind11::detail::descr&&, pybind11::detail::descr&&)’ was here
         PYBIND11_NOINLINE descr friend operator+(descr &&d1, descr &&d2) {
                                        ^~~~~~~~

This appears to be happening because gcc is considering implicit
construction of `descr` in some places using addition of two
`descr`-compatible arguments in the `descr.h` c++11 fallback code.
There's no particular reason that this operator needs to be a friend
function: this commit changes it to an rvalue-context member function
operator, which avoids the warning.
2017-05-10 10:42:23 -04:00
Bruce Merry
b82c0f0a2d Allow std::complex field with PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE (#831)
This exposed a few underlying issues:

1. is_pod_struct was too strict to allow this. I've relaxed it to
require only trivially copyable and standard layout, rather than POD
(which additionally requires a trivial constructor, which std::complex
violates).

2. format_descriptor<std::complex<T>>::format() returned numpy format
strings instead of PEP3118 format strings, but register_dtype
feeds format codes of its fields to _dtype_from_pep3118. I've changed it
to return PEP3118 format codes. format_descriptor is a public type, so
this may be considered an incompatible change.

3. register_structured_dtype tried to be smart about whether to mark
fields as unaligned (with ^). However, it's examining the C++ alignment,
rather than what numpy (or possibly PEP3118) thinks the alignment should
be. For complex values those are different. I've made it mark all fields
as ^ unconditionally, which should always be safe even if they are
aligned, because we explicitly mark the padding.
2017-05-10 11:36:24 +02:00
Bruce Merry
8e0d832c7d Support arrays inside PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE (#832)
Resolves #800.

Both C++ arrays and std::array are supported, including mixtures like
std::array<int, 2>[4]. In a multi-dimensional array of char, the last
dimension is used to construct a numpy string type.
2017-05-10 10:21:01 +02:00