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Basilisk

PyPI Test

Write Python canisters for the Internet Computer. Forked from Kybra.

Features

  • Write IC canisters in pure Python using @query and @update decorators
  • Two backends: CPython 3.13 (default, fast builds) and RustPython
  • Fast template builds: CPython canisters build in seconds, not minutes
  • IC system APIs: ic.caller(), ic.time(), ic.print(), ic.canister_balance(), etc.
  • Chunked code upload for canisters larger than 10MB
  • StableBTreeMap for persistent key-value storage across upgrades
  • Principal, Opt, Vec, Record, Variant type support

Getting Started

Prerequisites

  • dfx (IC SDK)
  • Python 3.10+
  • WASI SDK (for CPython backend)

Install

pip install ic-basilisk

Create a new project

basilisk new my_project
cd my_project

This creates a ready-to-deploy project:

my_project/
  src/main.py    -- your canister code
  dfx.json       -- IC project config

The generated canister code

from basilisk import query, update, text, nat64, ic

counter = 0

@query
def greet(name: text) -> text:
    return f"Hello, {name}! The counter is at {counter}."

@query
def get_counter() -> nat64:
    return counter

@update
def increment() -> nat64:
    global counter
    counter += 1
    return counter

@query
def get_time() -> nat64:
    return ic.time()

@query
def whoami() -> text:
    return str(ic.caller())

Deploy and call

dfx start --background
dfx deploy

dfx canister call my_project greet '("World")'
# ("Hello, World! The counter is at 0.")

dfx canister call my_project increment
# (1 : nat64)

dfx canister call my_project whoami
# ("2vxsx-fae")

Python Backends

Basilisk supports two Python backends:

# CPython 3.13 (default) -- fast template builds
basilisk new my_project

# RustPython -- legacy, full Rust build
basilisk new --backend rustpython my_project

CPython vs RustPython

CPython 3.13 RustPython
Build time ~seconds (template) ~60-120s (Cargo build)
canister_init ~51M instructions (1% of budget) ~200-500M instructions
Cycles per update call ~7M ~35-70M (estimated)
Python compatibility Full (reference implementation) Partial
Python version 3.13 ~3.10 (partial)

CPython is ~5-10x cheaper per call due to its optimized C interpreter. Queries are free on the IC regardless of backend.

Benchmark Results

Measured on a local IC replica (dfx start). All times are query call round-trip in milliseconds.

Benchmark RustPython (ms) CPython (ms) Speedup
fibonacci(100) 29.8 26.0 1.1x
fibonacci(500) 16.3 8.1 2.0x
fibonacci(1000) 13.6 8.8 1.5x
string_processing(100) 11.6 8.8 1.3x
string_processing(500) 15.7 10.1 1.6x
dict_operations(100) 16.6 9.4 1.8x
dict_operations(500) 22.0 12.8 1.7x
json_roundtrip(50) 88.1 16.0 5.5x
json_roundtrip(100) 173.6 22.0 7.9x
json_roundtrip(200) 517.6 30.9 16.8x
sort_benchmark(1000) 15.9 7.6 2.1x
list_comprehension(100) 45.2 9.6 4.7x

CPython is faster across the board, with the largest gains on JSON (up to 16.8x) and list comprehensions (up to 4.7x). See examples/benchmark/ for the full benchmark suite.

CLI Reference

basilisk new [--backend cpython|rustpython] <project_name>   # scaffold a project
basilisk build                                                # build in current dir
basilisk --version                                            # print version

Available Types

from basilisk import (
    query, update,                    # method decorators
    text, blob, null, void,           # basic types
    nat, nat8, nat16, nat32, nat64,   # unsigned integers
    int8, int16, int32, int64,        # signed integers
    float32, float64,                 # floats
    Opt, Vec, Record, Variant,        # compound types
    Principal,                        # IC principal
    ic,                               # IC system API
)

IC System API

from basilisk import ic

ic.caller()              # caller's Principal
ic.time()                # current timestamp (nanoseconds)
ic.id()                  # canister's own Principal
ic.print(msg)            # debug print (visible in replica logs)
ic.trap(msg)             # abort with error message
ic.canister_balance()    # current cycle balance
ic.canister_balance128() # cycle balance as 128-bit int

Disclaimer

Basilisk may have unknown security vulnerabilities due to the following:

  • Limited production deployments on the IC
  • No extensive automated property tests
  • No independent security reviews/audits

Documentation

For detailed architecture notes, see CPYTHON_MIGRATION_NOTES.md. For the original Kybra documentation, see The Kybra Book.

Discussion

Feel free to open issues.

License

See LICENSE and NOTICE.

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