* Update pytest to 6.2.1 in tests/requirements.txt
* Pin pytest to last supported version for 3.5
* Suppress PytestUnraisableExceptionWarning and use sys.__unraisablehook__ instead of sys.unraisablehook
* Fix filterwarnings mark on old pytest and old Python versions
* Cleanup ignore_pytest_unraisable_warning decorator
* docs: mention PYTHONPATH in installing.rst
When pybind11 is included as a submodule, the user needs to update their
Python module search path. Otherwise, the first c++ compilation command
in docs/basics.rst will fail.
* docs: add a note about compiling the example
This note shows how to modify the compilation command for the example
when the pybind11 source has been included as a Git submodule.
* docs: add a note about compiling the example
Added an internal link to the docs
* docs: updated a note about compiling the example
Also updated the command substitution syntax for consistency
* Avoid thread termination in scoped_released
Do not call `PyEval_RestoreThread()` from `~gil_scoped_release()` if python runtime is finalizing, as it will result in thread termination in Python runtime newer than 3.6, as documented in https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/init.html#c.PyEval_RestoreThread
Similarly do not call `PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent` from `~gil_scoped_acquire()` if runtime is finalizing.
Discovered while debugging PyTorch crash using Python-3.9 described in https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/47776
* Simplify _Py_IsFinalizing() availability check
* Fix typo
* Add version agnostic `detail::finalization_guard()`
* Move `finalization_guard` to detail/common.h
And rename it to `is_finalizing`
* Move `is_finalizing()` back to pybind11.h
* Simplify `is_finalizing()` check
One should follow documentation rather than make any assumptions
* feat: disarm
* docs: fix comment
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
* minor cleanup: fixing or silencing flake8 errors
* ci: lock CMake to non-Universal version
* Update .github/workflows/ci.yml
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <HenrySchreinerIII@gmail.com>
* Allow type_caster of std::reference_wrapper<T> to be the same as a native reference.
Before, both std::reference_wrapper<T> and std::reference_wrapper<const T> would
invoke cast_op<type>. This doesn't allow the type_caster<> specialization for T
to distinguish reference_wrapper types from value types.
After, the type_caster<> specialization invokes cast_op<type&>, which allows
reference_wrapper to behave in the same way as a native reference type.
* Add tests/examples for std::reference_wrapper<const T>
* Add tests which use mutable/immutable variants
This test is a chimera; it blends the pybind11 casters with a custom
pytype implementation that supports immutable and mutable calls.
In order to detect the immutable/mutable state, the cast_op needs
to propagate it, even through e.g. std::reference<const T>
Note: This is still a work in progress; some things are crashing,
which likely means that I have a refcounting bug or something else
missing.
* Add/finish tests that distinguish const& from &
Fixes the bugs in my custom python type implementation,
demonstrate test that requires const& and reference_wrapper<const T>
being treated differently from Non-const.
* Add passing a const to non-const method.
* Demonstrate non-const conversion of reference_wrapper in tests.
Apply formatting presubmit check.
* Fix build errors from presubmit checks.
* Try and fix a few more CI errors
* More CI fixes.
* More CI fixups.
* Try and get PyPy to work.
* Additional minor fixups. Getting close to CI green.
* More ci fixes?
* fix clang-tidy warnings from presubmit
* fix more clang-tidy warnings
* minor comment and consistency cleanups
* PyDECREF -> Py_DECREF
* copy/move constructors
* Resolve codereview comments
* more review comment fixes
* review comments: remove spurious &
* Make the test fail even when the static_assert is commented out.
This expands the test_freezable_type_caster a bit by:
1/ adding accessors .is_immutable and .addr to compare identity
from python.
2/ Changing the default cast_op of the type_caster<> specialization
to return a non-const value. In normal codepaths this is a reasonable
default.
3/ adding roundtrip variants to exercise the by reference, by pointer
and by reference_wrapper in all call paths. In conjunction with 2/, this
demonstrates the failure case of the existing std::reference_wrpper conversion,
which now loses const in a similar way that happens when using the default cast_op_type<>.
* apply presubmit formatting
* Revert inclusion of test_freezable_type_caster
There's some concern that this test is a bit unwieldly because of the use
of the raw <Python.h> functions. Removing for now.
* Add a test that validates const references propagation.
This test verifies that cast_op may be used to correctly detect
const reference types when used with std::reference_wrapper.
* mend
* Review comments based changes.
1. std::add_lvalue_reference<type> -> type&
2. Simplify the test a little more; we're never returning the ConstRefCaster
type so the class_ definition can be removed.
* formatted files again.
* Move const_ref_caster test to builtin_casters
* Review comments: use cast_op and adjust some comments.
* Simplify ConstRefCasted test
I like this version better as it moves the assertion that matters
back into python.
`git submodule add` needs the branch before the repository or else it is ignored. The previous code checked out the `master` branch, not the `stable` branch.
* feat: lazy compile
* refactor: lazy -> only_changed
* refactor: leave the changed function up to the user
* refactor: pass a function, based on @YannickJadoul and @HDembinski's suggestions
* refactor: old -> _old, as it's not intended for users
* docs: slight improvmenent from @rwgk
* docs: Ccache spelling, extra warning about pip caching
Ccache spelling noted by @YannickJadoul
* fix: match new extension discovery with changes to classic discovery
Followup to #2638 - this was fixed in 2.6.0, but only for classic Python
* fix: followup to avoid warnings
* Adding missing virtual destructors, to silence clang -Wnon-virtual-dtor warnings.
Tested with clang version 9.0.1-12 under an Ubuntu-like OS.
Originally discovered in the Google-internal environment.
* adding -Wnon-virtual-dtor for GNU|Intel|Clang
This line had two bugs:
1. It declares `py::detail::class_` as `friend`.
2. After fixing that, we would have to change it to
`template <typename, typename...>`
The first one was introduced ~5 years ago, when a large refactoring was
made, probably as an intermediate step during refactoring.
The second was made when `generic_type` was made to be agnostic with
respect to the order of `py::class_` template parameters.
We're removing the declaration altogether, because it was never relied
on. This is what makes me think that it was an intermediate step in
refactoring that shouldn't have ended up in commit history.