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Write C Bindings
In order to use a C/C++ library in python, you need to write bindings for it.
pkpy uses an universal signature to wrap a C function pointer as a python function or method, i.e py_CFunction.
typedef bool (*py_CFunction)(int argc, py_Ref argv);
argcis the number of arguments passed to the function.argvis the pointer to the first argument.
If successful, the function should return true and set the return value in py_retval(). In case there is no return value, you should use py_newnone(py_retval()).
If an error occurs, the function should raise an exception and return false.
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Steps
Say you have a function add that takes two integers and returns their sum.
int add(int a, int b) {
return a + b;
}
Here is how you can write the binding for it:
// 1. Define a wrapper function with the signature `py_CFunction`.
bool py_add(int argc, py_Ref argv) {
// 2. Check the number of arguments.
PY_CHECK_ARGC(2);
// 3. Check the type of arguments.
PY_CHECK_ARG_TYPE(0, tp_int);
PY_CHECK_ARG_TYPE(1, tp_int);
// 4. Convert the arguments into C types.
int _0 = py_toint(py_arg(0));
int _1 = py_toint(py_arg(1));
// 5. Call the original function.
int res = add(_0, _1);
// 6. Set the return value.
py_newint(py_retval(), res);
// 7. Return `true`.
return true;
}
Once you have the wrapper function, you can bind it to a python module via py_bindfunc.
py_GlobalRef mod = py_getmodule("__main__");
py_bindfunc(mod, "add", py_add);
Alternatively, you can use py_bind with a signature, which allows you to specify some default values.
py_GlobalRef mod = py_getmodule("__main__");
py_bind(mod, "add(a, b=1)", py_add);
See also: