Quick and painless wrapping C code into Python
Project description
Quick and painless wrapping C code into Python.
Free software: MIT license
Documentation: https://cslug.readthedocs.io/
The cslug package provides a thin layer on top of the built-in ctypes library, making it easier to load functions and structures from C into Python.
Alternatives
Mixing C with Python is nothing new - there are plenty of other ways. A nice comparison of the various methods can be found here. cslug aims to be the simplest although it certainly isn’t the most flexible.
Using ctypes driven wrapping has both advantages and disadvantages over Python extension modules and tools that write them (such as Cython).
Advantages
C code can be just plain high school level C. Even a hello world Python extension module is some 40 lines of incomprehensible macros.
Binaries are not linked against Python and are therefore not tied to a specific Python version. A Python extension module needs to be recompiled for every minor version of Python (3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9) and for every platform (Windows, macOS, Linux) whereas a cslug binary need only be compiled for every platform.
You can use virtually any C compiler. Python extension modules must be built with clang on macOS and MSVC on Windows.
File sizes of binaries are very small. 1000 lines of C code equates to about 20KB of binary on Linux. Python extension modules are typically several times larger and a bare-bones Cython-ised import numpy extension is several MBs.
Disadvantages
The surrounding Python code is less automated. A Python extension module looks and feels like a native Python module out the box whereas a small wrapper function is generally required for ctypes.
You can’t use native Python types such as list or dict within C code. Using such types will generally reduce performance down to near pure Python levels anyway so this is a small loss in practice.
You can’t use C++.
Supported Compilers
The following OS/compiler combinations are fully supported and tested regularly.
Compiler |
Linux |
Windows |
macOS |
FreeBSD |
Cygwin/msys2 |
Android* |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✗ |
|
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✓ |
✗ |
✓ |
|
MSVC |
✗ |
✗ |
✗ |
✗ |
✗ |
✗ |
✓ |
✓ |
✗ |
✗ |
✗ |
✗ |
* Using Termux.
Installation
cslug requires a C compiler to compile C code. Its favourite compiler is gcc. Linux distributions typically come with it preinstalled. If you are on another OS or just don’t have it then you should get it with mingw-w64. Windows users are recommended to download WinLibs without LLVM/Clang/LLD/LLDB (although cslug works with clang too) and add its mingw64/bin directory to PATH.
Check that you have it set up by running the following in a terminal:
gcc -v
By default, cslug will use gcc if it can find it. On macOS or FreeBSD it will switch to clang if gcc is unavailable. To use any other supported compiler, cslug respects the CC environment variable. Set it to the name or full path of your alternative compiler.
Install cslug itself with the usual:
pip install cslug
Whilst cslug is still in its 0.x versions, breaking changes may occur on minor version increments. Please don’t assume forward compatibility - pick a version you like and pin it in a requirements.txt. Inspect the changelog for anything that may break your code.
Quickstart
Check out our quickstart page on readthedocs to get started.
Credits
Hall of fame for contributions to cslug.
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