Wrap C++ lib with Cython

YuQing Zhang picture YuQing Zhang · Jan 20, 2010 · Viewed 15.7k times · Source

I'm new to Cython and I'm trying to use Cython to wrap a C/C++ static library. I made a simple example as follow.

Test.h:

#ifndef TEST_H
#define TEST_H

int add(int a, int b);
int multipy(int a, int b);

#endif

Test.cpp

#include "test.h"
int add(int a, int b)
{
    return a+b;

}

int multipy(int a, int b)
{
    return a*b;
} 

Then I used g++ to compile and build it.

g++ -c test.cpp -o libtest.o
ar rcs libtest.a libtest.o

So now I got a static library called libtest.a.

Test.pyx:

cdef extern from "test.h":
        int add(int a,int b)
        int multipy(int a,int b)

print add(2,3)

Setup.py:

from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
from Cython.Distutils import build_ext

ext_modules = [Extension("test",
                     ["test.pyx"],
                     language='c++',
                     include_dirs=[r'.'],
                     library_dirs=[r'.'],
                     libraries=['libtest']
                     )]

setup(
  name = 'test',
  cmdclass = {'build_ext': build_ext},
  ext_modules = ext_modules
)

The I called:

python setup.py build_ext --compiler=mingw32 --inplace

The output was:

running build_ext
cythoning test.pyx to test.cpp
building 'test' extension
creating build
creating build\temp.win32-2.6
creating build\temp.win32-2.6\Release
C:\Program Files\pythonxy\mingw\bin\gcc.exe -mno-cygwin -mdll -O -Wall -I. -IC:\
Python26\include -IC:\Python26\PC -c test.cpp -o build\temp.win32-2.6\Release\test.o
writing build\temp.win32-2.6\Release\test.def
C:\Program Files\pythonxy\mingw\bin\g++.exe -mno-cygwin -mdll -static --entry _D
llMain@12 --output-lib build\temp.win32-2.6\Release\libtest.a --def build\temp.w
in32-2.6\Release\test.def -s build\temp.win32-2.6\Release\test.o -L. -LC:\Python
26\libs -LC:\Python26\PCbuild -ltest -lpython26 -lmsvcr90 -o test.pyd
g++: build\temp.win32-2.6\Release\libtest.a: No such file or directory
error: command 'g++' failed with exit status 1

I also tried to use libraries=['test'] instead of libraries=['libtest']. It gave me the same errors.

Any clue about this?

Answer

Luper Rouch picture Luper Rouch · Jan 21, 2010

If your C++ code is only used by the wrapper, another option is to let the setup compile your .cpp file, like this:

from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
from Cython.Distutils import build_ext

ext_modules = [Extension("test",
                     ["test.pyx", "test.cpp"],
                     language='c++',
                     )]

setup(
  name = 'test',
  cmdclass = {'build_ext': build_ext},
  ext_modules = ext_modules
)

For linking to a static library you have to use the extra_objects argument in your Extension:

from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
from Cython.Distutils import build_ext

ext_modules = [Extension("test",
                     ["test.pyx"],
                     language='c++',
                     extra_objects=["libtest.a"],
                     )]

setup(
  name = 'test',
  cmdclass = {'build_ext': build_ext},
  ext_modules = ext_modules
)