Commit Graph

81 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Cousineau
c513b5e3c6
tests(CMakeLists): robustify against add'l versions of Boost (#2608)
* tests/CMakeLists: Robustify against add'l versions of Boost

* refactor: simpler impl

Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
2020-10-18 20:42:48 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
63f2deea32 chore: update Eigen 2020-10-15 17:38:49 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
3488494a81
refactor: import check as a common function (#2526)
* feat: import check as a common function

* docs: add cmake to docs
2020-10-02 22:34:22 -04:00
Eric Cousineau
d74be32109
tests: Fix test override execution (#2512) 2020-09-22 12:01:15 -04:00
andriish
38370a87f4
fix: support NVIDIA-PGI HPC SDK (#2475)
* Added guards to the includes

Added new CI config

Added new trigger

Changed CI workflow name

Debug CI

Debug CI

Debug CI

Debug CI

Added flags fro PGI

Disable Eigen

Removed tests that fail

Uncomment lines

* fix: missing include

fix: minor style cleanup

tests: support skipping

ci: remove and tighten a bit

fix: try msvc workaround for pgic

* tests: split up prealoc tests

* fix: PGI compiler fix

* fix: PGI void_t only

* fix: try to appease nvcc

* ci: better ordering for slow tests

* ci: minor improvements to testing

* ci: Add NumPy to testing

* ci: Eigen generates CUDA warnings / PGI errors

* Added CentOS7 back for a moment

* Fix YAML

* ci: runs-on missing

* centos7 is missing pytest

* ci: use C++11 on CentOS 7

* ci: test something else

* Try just adding flags on CentOS 7

* fix: CentOS 7

* refactor: move include to shared location

* Added verbose flag

* Try to use system cmake3 on CI

* Try to use system cmake3 on CI, attempt2

* Try to use system cmake3 on CI, attempt3

* tests: not finding pytest should be a warning, not a fatal error

* tests: cleanup

* Weird issue?

* fix: final polish

Co-authored-by: Andrii Verbytskyi <andrii.verbytskyi@mpp.mpg.de>
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrii Verbytskyi <averbyts@cern.ch>
2020-09-11 22:06:52 -04:00
Ciro Santilli
b47efd35fb
Use defined for some preprocessor variables that might be undefined (#2476)
The variables PYBIND11_HAS_OPTIONAL, PYBIND11_HAS_EXP_OPTIONAL, PYBIND11_HAS_VARIANT,
__clang__, __APPLE__ were not checked for defined in a minortity of instances.

If the project using pybind11 sets -Wundef, the warnings will show.

The test build is also modified to catch the problem.
2020-09-10 13:58:26 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
621906b3e7
fix: support nvcc and test (#2461)
* fix: support nvcc and test

* fixup! fix: support nvcc and test

* docs: mention what compilers fail

* fix: much simpler logic

* refactor: slightly faster / clearer
2020-09-10 11:49:26 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
04fdc44f50
tests: avoid putting build products into source directory (#2353)
* tests: keep source dir clean

* ci: make first build inplace

* ci: drop dev setting (wasn't doing anything)

* tests: warn if source directory is dirty
2020-08-19 13:11:57 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
1729aae96f
feat: new FindPython support (#2370)
* feat: FindPython support

* refactor: rename to PYBIND11_FINDPYTHON

* docs: Caps fixes

* feat: NOPYTHON mode

* test: check simple call

* docs: add changelog/upgrade guide

* feat: Support Python3 and Python2

* refactor: Use targets in tests

* fix: support CMake 3.4+

* feat: classic search also finds virtual environments

* docs: some updates from @wjakob's review

* fix: wrong name for QUIET mode variable, reported by @skoslowski

* refactor: cleaner output messaging

* fix: support debug Python's in FindPython mode too

* fixup! refactor: cleaner output messaging

* fix: missing pybind11_FOUND and pybind11_INCLUDE_DIR restored to subdir mode

* fix: nicer reporting of Python / PyPy

* fix: out-of-order variable fix

* docs: minor last-minute cleanup
2020-08-19 12:26:26 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
6404099712
docs: contrib/issue templates (#2377)
* docs: move helpers to .github where allowed

* docs: more guidelines in CONTRIBUTING

* chore: update issue templates

* fix: review from @bstaletic

* refactor: a few points from @rwgk

* docs: more touchup, review changes
2020-08-17 10:14:23 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
4d9024ec71
tests: cleanup and ci hardening (#2397)
* tests: refactor and cleanup

* refactor: more consistent

* tests: vendor six

* tests: more xfails, nicer system

* tests: simplify to info

* tests: suggestions from @YannickJadoul and @bstaletic

* tests: restore some pypy tests that now pass

* tests: rename info to env

* tests: strict False/True

* tests: drop explicit strict=True again

* tests: reduce minimum PyTest to 3.1
2020-08-16 16:02:12 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
f7abac6689
fix: boost's include dir was listed first (#2384) 2020-08-12 09:33:08 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
df115977df chore: cleanup 2020-08-06 11:54:41 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
94db5c5ed1 format: apply cmake-format 2020-07-30 20:27:55 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
e2a96890e1 format: add cmake-format to pre-commit 2020-07-30 20:27:55 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
6ec1775fff feat: drop CMake 3.6 and below, modernize CMake
fix: include PYTHON_IS_DEBUG
2020-07-30 20:27:55 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
1b880dfd5a ci: download EIGEN 2020-07-27 22:12:19 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
1f53c373e4 fix: C++17 mode on Clang may error 2020-07-26 09:25:27 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
a59c6de821 test: allow MSVC/Xcode to run the embed test 2020-07-23 17:42:53 -04:00
Henry Schreiner
49007b7ff3 test: fix warning/error on Python 2 in 14/17 mode 2020-07-23 17:42:53 -04:00
B Krishna Chaitanya
714424387f Refactor: Extract Custom Type Casts related tests 2020-07-01 00:07:49 +02:00
Eric Cousineau
2c30e0a118
cmake: Expose PYBIND11_TEST_OVERRIDE (#2218)
Primarily for the ccmake curses GUI
2020-05-31 07:00:55 +02:00
Jeremy Maitin-Shepard
a3f4a0e8ab Add support for __await__, __aiter__, and __anext__ protocols (#1842) 2019-07-18 09:02:35 +02:00
Saran Tunyasuvunakool
b60fd233fa Make sure detail::get_internals acquires the GIL before making Python calls. (#1836)
This is only necessary if `get_internals` is called for the first time in a given module when the running thread is in a GIL-released state.

Fixes #1364
2019-07-15 16:47:02 +02:00
Wenzel Jakob
e11e71d85c Make compiler flags for -Werror specific to GNU, Clang, or Intel 2019-06-11 23:28:58 +02:00
Roland Dreier
1aa8dd1745 Fix assertion failure for unions (#1685) (#1709)
In def_readonly and def_readwrite, there is an assertion that the member comes
from the class or a base class:

    static_assert(std::is_base_of<C, type>::value, "...");

However, if C and type are the same type, is_base_of will still only be true
if they are the same _non-union_ type.  This means we can't define accessors
for the members of a union type because of this assertion.

Update the assertion to test

    std::is_same<C, type>::value || std::is_base_of<C, type>::value

which will allow union types, or members of base classes.

Also add a basic unit test for accessing unions.
2019-06-11 23:28:58 +02:00
Borja Zarco
e2b884c33b Use PyGILState_GetThisThreadState when using gil_scoped_acquire. (#1211)
This avoids GIL deadlocking when pybind11 tries to acquire the GIL in a thread that already acquired it using standard Python API (e.g. when running from a Python thread).
2018-12-01 22:47:40 +09:00
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
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
Jason Rhinelander
64a99b92fe Specify minimum needed cmake version in test suite
Fixes #1117
2017-09-28 08:04:34 -03:00
Dean Moldovan
2b4477eb65 Make TypeErrors more informative when an optional header is missing
E.g. trying to convert a `list` to a `std::vector<int>` without
including <pybind11/stl.h> will now raise an error with a note that
suggests checking the headers.

The note is only appended if `std::` is found in the function
signature. This should only be the case when a header is missing.
E.g. when stl.h is included, the signature would contain `List[int]`
instead of `std::vector<int>` while using stl_bind.h would produce
something like `MyVector`. Similarly for `std::map`/`Dict`, `complex`,
`std::function`/`Callable`, etc.

There's a possibility for false positives, but it's pretty low.
2017-09-12 08:06:46 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
3c4933cb50 Fix STL casters for containers with proxies (regression)
To avoid an ODR violation in the test suite while testing
both `stl.h` and `std_bind.h` with `std::vector<bool>`,
the `py::bind_vector<std::vector<bool>>` test is moved to
the secondary module (which does not include `stl.h`).
2017-09-10 12:25:10 +02:00
Florian Apolloner
29b99a11a4 Specify CXX as project language for CMake >= 3.4 (#1027) 2017-08-30 14:17:54 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
c40ef612cc Skip boost::variant tests on unsupported compilers and versions of Boost 2017-08-25 21:11:36 +02:00
Henry Schreiner
8b40505575 Utility for redirecting C++ streams to Python (#1009) 2017-08-25 02:12:43 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
464d98962d Allow binding factory functions as constructors
This allows you to use:

    cls.def(py::init(&factory_function));

where `factory_function` returns a pointer, holder, or value of the
class type (or a derived type).  Various compile-time checks
(static_asserts) are performed to ensure the function is valid, and
various run-time type checks where necessary.

Some other details of this feature:
- The `py::init` name doesn't conflict with the templated no-argument
  `py::init<...>()`, but keeps the naming consistent: the existing
  templated, no-argument one wraps constructors, the no-template,
  function-argument one wraps factory functions.
- If returning a CppClass (whether by value or pointer) when an CppAlias
  is required (i.e. python-side inheritance and a declared alias), a
  dynamic_cast to the alias is attempted (for the pointer version); if
  it fails, or if returned by value, an Alias(Class &&) constructor
  is invoked.  If this constructor doesn't exist, a runtime error occurs.
- for holder returns when an alias is required, we try a dynamic_cast of
  the wrapped pointer to the alias to see if it is already an alias
  instance; if it isn't, we raise an error.
- `py::init(class_factory, alias_factory)` is also available that takes
  two factories: the first is called when an alias is not needed, the
  second when it is.
- Reimplement factory instance clearing.  The previous implementation
  failed under python-side multiple inheritance: *each* inherited
  type's factory init would clear the instance instead of only setting
  its own type value.  The new implementation here clears just the
  relevant value pointer.
- dealloc is updated to explicitly set the leftover value pointer to
  nullptr and the `holder_constructed` flag to false so that it can be
  used to clear preallocated value without needing to rebuild the
  instance internals data.
- Added various tests to test out new allocation/deallocation code.
- With preallocation now done lazily, init factory holders can
  completely avoid the extra overhead of needing an extra
  allocation/deallocation.
- Updated documentation to make factory constructors the default
  advanced constructor style.
- If an `__init__` is called a second time, we have two choices: we can
  throw away the first instance, replacing it with the second; or we can
  ignore the second call.  The latter is slightly easier, so do that.
2017-08-17 09:33:27 -04:00
Dean Moldovan
7918bcc95b Add support for boost::variant in C++11 mode
In C++11 mode, `boost::apply_visitor` requires an explicit `result_type`.
This also adds optional tests for `boost::variant` in C++11/14, if boost
is available. In C++17 mode, `std::variant` is tested instead.
2017-08-12 21:27:44 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
7437c69500 Add py::module_local() attribute for module-local type bindings
This commit adds a `py::module_local` attribute that lets you confine a
registered type to the module (more technically, the shared object) in
which it is defined, by registering it with:

    py::class_<C>(m, "C", py::module_local())

This will allow the same C++ class `C` to be registered in different
modules with independent sets of class definitions.  On the Python side,
two such types will be completely distinct; on the C++ side, the C++
type resolves to a different Python type in each module.

This applies `py::module_local` automatically to `stl_bind.h` bindings
when the container value type looks like something global: i.e. when it
is a converting type (for example, when binding a `std::vector<int>`),
or when it is a registered type itself bound with `py::module_local`.
This should help resolve potential future conflicts (e.g. if two
completely unrelated modules both try to bind a `std::vector<int>`.
Users can override the automatic selection by adding a
`py::module_local()` or `py::module_local(false)`.

Note that this does mildly break backwards compatibility: bound stl
containers of basic types like `std::vector<int>` cannot be bound in one
module and returned in a different module.  (This can be re-enabled with
`py::module_local(false)` as described above, but with the potential for
eventual load conflicts).
2017-08-04 10:47:34 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
d598172993 Fix builtin exception handlers to work across modules
The builtin exception handler currently doesn't work across modules
under clang/libc++ for builtin pybind exceptions like
`pybind11::error_already_set` or `pybind11::stop_iteration`: under
RTLD_LOCAL module loading clang considers each module's exception
classes distinct types.  This then means that the base exception
translator fails to catch the exceptions and the fall through to the
generic `std::exception` handler, which completely breaks things like
`stop_iteration`: only the `stop_iteration` of the first module loaded
actually works properly; later modules raise a RuntimeError with no
message when trying to invoke their iterators.

For example, two modules defined like this exhibit the behaviour under
clang++/libc++:

z1.cpp:
    #include <pybind11/pybind11.h>
    #include <pybind11/stl_bind.h>
    namespace py = pybind11;
    PYBIND11_MODULE(z1, m) {
        py::bind_vector<std::vector<long>>(m, "IntVector");
    }

z2.cpp:
    #include <pybind11/pybind11.h>
    #include <pybind11/stl_bind.h>
    namespace py = pybind11;
    PYBIND11_MODULE(z2, m) {
        py::bind_vector<std::vector<double>>(m, "FloatVector");
    }

Python:
    import z1, z2
    for i in z2.FloatVector():
        pass

results in:
    Traceback (most recent call last):
      File "zs.py", line 2, in <module>
        for i in z2.FloatVector():
    RuntimeError

This commit fixes the issue by adding a new exception translator each
time the internals pointer is initialized from python builtins: this
generally means the internals data was initialized by some other
module.  (The extra translator(s) are skipped under libstdc++).
2017-08-04 10:47:34 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
0bd5979c77 Add cross-module test plugin
This adds the infrastructure for a separate test plugin for cross-module
tests.  (This commit contains no tests that actually use it, but the
following commits do; this is separated simply to provide a cleaner
commit history).
2017-08-04 10:47:34 -04:00
Dean Moldovan
c67033a926 Move test_cmake_build target code into its subdirectory 2017-06-27 10:38:41 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
0bc272b2e9 Move tests from short translation units into their logical parents 2017-06-27 10:38:41 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
83e328f58c Split test_python_types.cpp into builtin_casters, stl and pytypes 2017-06-27 10:38:41 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
bdfb50f384 Move tests from test_issues.cpp/py into appropriate files 2017-06-27 10:38:41 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
9693a5c78f Add Catch framework for testing embedding support and C++-side features
At this point, there is only a single test for interpreter basics.

Apart from embedding itself, having a C++ test framework will also
benefit the C++-side features by allowing them to be tested directly.
2017-05-28 02:12:24 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
7f5c85c861 Add CMake target for embedding the Python interpreter
All targets provided by pybind11:

* pybind11::module - the existing target for creating extension modules
* pybind11::embed - new target for embedding the interpreter
* pybind11::pybind11 - common "base" target (headers only)
2017-05-28 02:12:24 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
8dc63ba941 Force MSVC to compile in utf-8 mode
MSVC by default uses the local codepage, which fails when it sees the
utf-8 in test_python_types.cpp.  This adds the /utf-8 flag to the test
suite compilation to force it to interpret source code as utf-8.

Fixes #869
2017-05-25 10:09:56 -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
Wenzel Jakob
7653a115bd pytest target: add USE_TERMINAL flag
The added flag enables non-buffered console output when using Ninja
2017-04-29 16:35:28 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
555dc4f07a Fix test_cmake_build failure with bare python exe name (fix #783)
Besides appearing in the CMake GUI, the `:FILENAME` specifier changes
behavior as well:

cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=python ..  # FAIL, can't find python
cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/path/to/python ..  # OK
cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE:FILENAME=python ..  # OK
cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE:FILENAME=/path/to/python ..  # OK
2017-04-06 22:41:32 +02:00