I want to know how to wrap a C++ object with Python Extension API (and distutils) without external tools (like Cython, Boost, SWIG, ...). Just in pure Python way without creating a dll.
Note that my C++ object has memory allocations so destructor has to be called to avoid memory leaks.
#include "Voice.h"
namespace transformation
{
Voice::Voice(int fftSize) { mem=new double[fftSize]; }
Voice::~Voice() { delete [] mem; }
int Voice::method1() { /*do stuff*/ return (1); }
}
I just want to do somethings like that in Python :
import voice
v=voice.Voice(512)
result=v.method1()
Seems that the answer was in fact here : https://docs.python.org/3.6/extending/newtypes.html
With examples, but not really easy.
EDIT 1 :
In fact, it is not really for wrapping a C++ object in a Python object, but rather to create a Python object with C code. (edit2 : and so you can wrap C++ object!)
EDIT 2 :
Here is a solution using the Python newtypes
.
Original C++ file : Voice.cpp
#include <cstdio>
#include "Voice.h"
namespace transformation
{
Voice::Voice(int fftSize) {
printf("c++ constructor of voice\n");
this->fftSize=fftSize;
mem=new double[fftSize];
}
Voice::~Voice() { delete [] mem; }
int Voice::filter(int freq) {
printf("c++ voice filter method\n");
return (doubleIt(3));
}
int Voice::doubleIt(int i) { return 2*i; }
}
.
Original h file : Voice.h
namespace transformation {
class Voice {
public:
double *mem;
int fftSize;
Voice(int fftSize);
~Voice();
int filter(int freq);
int doubleIt(int i);
};
}
.
C++ Python wrapper file : voiceWrapper.cpp
#include <Python.h>
#include <cstdio>
//~ #include "structmember.h"
#include "Voice.h"
using transformation::Voice;
typedef struct {
PyObject_HEAD
Voice * ptrObj;
} PyVoice;
static PyModuleDef voicemodule = {
PyModuleDef_HEAD_INIT,
"voice",
"Example module that wrapped a C++ object",
-1,
NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL
};
static int PyVoice_init(PyVoice *self, PyObject *args, PyObject *kwds)
// initialize PyVoice Object
{
int fftSize;
if (! PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "i", &fftSize))
return -1;
self->ptrObj=new Voice(fftSize);
return 0;
}
static void PyVoice_dealloc(PyVoice * self)
// destruct the object
{
delete self->ptrObj;
Py_TYPE(self)->tp_free(self);
}
static PyObject * PyVoice_filter(PyVoice* self, PyObject* args)
{
int freq;
int retval;
if (! PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "i", &freq))
return Py_False;
retval = (self->ptrObj)->filter(freq);
return Py_BuildValue("i",retval);
}
static PyMethodDef PyVoice_methods[] = {
{ "filter", (PyCFunction)PyVoice_filter, METH_VARARGS, "filter the mem voice" },
{NULL} /* Sentinel */
};
static PyTypeObject PyVoiceType = { PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL, 0)
"voice.Voice" /* tp_name */
};
PyMODINIT_FUNC PyInit_voice(void)
// create the module
{
PyObject* m;
PyVoiceType.tp_new = PyType_GenericNew;
PyVoiceType.tp_basicsize=sizeof(PyVoice);
PyVoiceType.tp_dealloc=(destructor) PyVoice_dealloc;
PyVoiceType.tp_flags=Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT;
PyVoiceType.tp_doc="Voice objects";
PyVoiceType.tp_methods=PyVoice_methods;
//~ PyVoiceType.tp_members=Noddy_members;
PyVoiceType.tp_init=(initproc)PyVoice_init;
if (PyType_Ready(&PyVoiceType) < 0)
return NULL;
m = PyModule_Create(&voicemodule);
if (m == NULL)
return NULL;
Py_INCREF(&PyVoiceType);
PyModule_AddObject(m, "Voice", (PyObject *)&PyVoiceType); // Add Voice object to the module
return m;
}
.
distutils file : setup.py
from distutils.core import setup, Extension
setup(name='voicePkg', version='1.0', \
ext_modules=[Extension('voice', ['voiceWrapper.cpp','Voice.cpp'])])
.
python test file : test.py
import voice
v=voice.Voice(512)
result=v.filter(5)
print('result='+str(result))
.
and magic :
sudo python3 setup.py install
python3 test.py
Output is :
c++ constructor of voice
c++ voice filter method
result=6
Enjoy !
Doom
You may like to start with Extending Python with C or C++.
You can use standard Python modules source code as examples.
The value provided by Boost.Python, SWIG, etc, is that you do not have to know/understand all the low level details because they handle them for you. This is why people use them.