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4edb1ce20c
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.
196 lines
7.3 KiB
C++
196 lines
7.3 KiB
C++
/*
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pybind11/embed.h: Support for embedding the interpreter
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Copyright (c) 2017 Wenzel Jakob <wenzel.jakob@epfl.ch>
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All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
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BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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*/
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#pragma once
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#include "pybind11.h"
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#include "eval.h"
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#if defined(PYPY_VERSION)
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# error Embedding the interpreter is not supported with PyPy
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#endif
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#if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3
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# define PYBIND11_EMBEDDED_MODULE_IMPL(name) \
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extern "C" PyObject *pybind11_init_impl_##name() { \
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return pybind11_init_wrapper_##name(); \
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}
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#else
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# define PYBIND11_EMBEDDED_MODULE_IMPL(name) \
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extern "C" void pybind11_init_impl_##name() { \
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pybind11_init_wrapper_##name(); \
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}
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#endif
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/** \rst
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Add a new module to the table of builtins for the interpreter. Must be
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defined in global scope. The first macro parameter is the name of the
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module (without quotes). The second parameter is the variable which will
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be used as the interface to add functions and classes to the module.
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.. code-block:: cpp
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PYBIND11_EMBEDDED_MODULE(example, m) {
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// ... initialize functions and classes here
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m.def("foo", []() {
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return "Hello, World!";
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});
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}
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\endrst */
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#define PYBIND11_EMBEDDED_MODULE(name, variable) \
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static void pybind11_init_##name(pybind11::module &); \
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static PyObject *pybind11_init_wrapper_##name() { \
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auto m = pybind11::module(#name); \
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try { \
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pybind11_init_##name(m); \
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return m.ptr(); \
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} catch (pybind11::error_already_set &e) { \
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e.clear(); \
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PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ImportError, e.what()); \
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return nullptr; \
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} catch (const std::exception &e) { \
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PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ImportError, e.what()); \
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return nullptr; \
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} \
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} \
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PYBIND11_EMBEDDED_MODULE_IMPL(name) \
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pybind11::detail::embedded_module name(#name, pybind11_init_impl_##name); \
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void pybind11_init_##name(pybind11::module &variable)
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NAMESPACE_BEGIN(pybind11)
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NAMESPACE_BEGIN(detail)
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/// Python 2.7/3.x compatible version of `PyImport_AppendInittab` and error checks.
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struct embedded_module {
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#if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3
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using init_t = PyObject *(*)();
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#else
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using init_t = void (*)();
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#endif
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embedded_module(const char *name, init_t init) {
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if (Py_IsInitialized())
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pybind11_fail("Can't add new modules after the interpreter has been initialized");
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auto result = PyImport_AppendInittab(name, init);
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if (result == -1)
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pybind11_fail("Insufficient memory to add a new module");
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}
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};
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NAMESPACE_END(detail)
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/** \rst
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Initialize the Python interpreter. No other pybind11 or CPython API functions can be
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called before this is done; with the exception of `PYBIND11_EMBEDDED_MODULE`. The
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optional parameter can be used to skip the registration of signal handlers (see the
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Python documentation for details). Calling this function again after the interpreter
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has already been initialized is a fatal error.
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\endrst */
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inline void initialize_interpreter(bool init_signal_handlers = true) {
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if (Py_IsInitialized())
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pybind11_fail("The interpreter is already running");
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Py_InitializeEx(init_signal_handlers ? 1 : 0);
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// Make .py files in the working directory available by default
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auto sys_path = reinterpret_borrow<list>(module::import("sys").attr("path"));
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sys_path.append(".");
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}
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/** \rst
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Shut down the Python interpreter. No pybind11 or CPython API functions can be called
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after this. In addition, pybind11 objects must not outlive the interpreter:
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.. code-block:: cpp
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{ // BAD
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py::initialize_interpreter();
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auto hello = py::str("Hello, World!");
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py::finalize_interpreter();
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} // <-- BOOM, hello's destructor is called after interpreter shutdown
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{ // GOOD
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py::initialize_interpreter();
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{ // scoped
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auto hello = py::str("Hello, World!");
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} // <-- OK, hello is cleaned up properly
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py::finalize_interpreter();
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}
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{ // BETTER
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py::scoped_interpreter guard{};
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auto hello = py::str("Hello, World!");
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}
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.. warning::
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The interpreter can be restarted by calling `initialize_interpreter` again.
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Modules created using pybind11 can be safely re-initialized. However, Python
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itself cannot completely unload binary extension modules and there are several
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caveats with regard to interpreter restarting. All the details can be found
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in the CPython documentation. In short, not all interpreter memory may be
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freed, either due to reference cycles or user-created global data.
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\endrst */
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inline void finalize_interpreter() {
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handle builtins(PyEval_GetBuiltins());
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const char *id = PYBIND11_INTERNALS_ID;
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// Get the internals pointer (without creating it if it doesn't exist). It's possible for the
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// internals to be created during Py_Finalize() (e.g. if a py::capsule calls `get_internals()`
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// during destruction), so we get the pointer-pointer here and check it after Py_Finalize().
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detail::internals **internals_ptr_ptr = &detail::get_internals_ptr();
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// It could also be stashed in builtins, so look there too:
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if (builtins.contains(id) && isinstance<capsule>(builtins[id]))
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internals_ptr_ptr = capsule(builtins[id]);
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Py_Finalize();
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if (internals_ptr_ptr) {
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delete *internals_ptr_ptr;
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*internals_ptr_ptr = nullptr;
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}
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}
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/** \rst
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Scope guard version of `initialize_interpreter` and `finalize_interpreter`.
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This a move-only guard and only a single instance can exist.
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.. code-block:: cpp
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#include <pybind11/embed.h>
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int main() {
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py::scoped_interpreter guard{};
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py::print(Hello, World!);
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} // <-- interpreter shutdown
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\endrst */
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class scoped_interpreter {
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public:
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scoped_interpreter(bool init_signal_handlers = true) {
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initialize_interpreter(init_signal_handlers);
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}
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scoped_interpreter(const scoped_interpreter &) = delete;
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scoped_interpreter(scoped_interpreter &&other) noexcept { other.is_valid = false; }
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scoped_interpreter &operator=(const scoped_interpreter &) = delete;
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scoped_interpreter &operator=(scoped_interpreter &&) = delete;
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~scoped_interpreter() {
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if (is_valid)
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finalize_interpreter();
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}
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private:
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bool is_valid = true;
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};
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NAMESPACE_END(pybind11)
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