Commit b66902fc authored by Thomas Heller's avatar Thomas Heller

More docs for ctypes.

parent 3b3f1184
...@@ -66,14 +66,7 @@ calling the constructor: ...@@ -66,14 +66,7 @@ calling the constructor:
<CDLL 'libc.so.6', handle ... at ...> <CDLL 'libc.so.6', handle ... at ...>
>>> >>>
\end{verbatim} \end{verbatim}
% XXX Add section for Mac OS X.
XXX Add section for Mac OS X.
\subsubsection{Finding shared libraries\label{ctypes-finding-shared-libraries}}
XXX Add description of ctypes.util.find{\_}library (once I really
understand it enough to describe it).
\subsubsection{Accessing functions from loaded dlls\label{ctypes-accessing-functions-from-loaded-dlls}} \subsubsection{Accessing functions from loaded dlls\label{ctypes-accessing-functions-from-loaded-dlls}}
...@@ -1413,62 +1406,199 @@ using \class{c{\_}int} as the base class. ...@@ -1413,62 +1406,199 @@ using \class{c{\_}int} as the base class.
\subsection{ctypes reference\label{ctypes-ctypes-reference}} \subsection{ctypes reference\label{ctypes-ctypes-reference}}
\subsubsection{Loading shared libraries\label{ctypes-loading-shared-libraries}} \subsubsection{Finding shared libraries\label{ctypes-finding-shared-libraries}}
\begin{classdesc}{LibraryLoader}{dlltype} When programming in a compiled language, shared libraries are accessed
Class which loads shared libraries. when compiling/linking a program, and when the program is run.
\end{classdesc}
\begin{methoddesc}{LoadLibrary}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None} The purpose of the \code{find{\_}library} function is to locate a library in
Load a shared library. a way similar to what the compiler does (on platforms with several
\end{methoddesc} versions of a shared library the most recent should be loaded), while
the ctypes library loaders act like when a program is run, and call
the runtime loader directly.
The \code{ctypes.util} module provides a function which can help to
determine the library to load.
\begin{datadescni}{find_library(name)}
Try to find a library and return a pathname. \var{name} is the
library name without any prefix like \var{lib}, suffix like \code{.so},
\code{.dylib} or version number (this is the form used for the posix
linker option \programopt{-l}). If no library can be found, returns
\code{None}.
\end{datadescni}
The exact functionality is system dependend.
On Linux, \code{find{\_}library} tries to run external programs
(/sbin/ldconfig, gcc, and objdump) to find the library file. It
returns the filename of the library file. Here are sone examples:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> from ctypes.util import find_library
>>> find_library("m")
'libm.so.6'
>>> find_library("c")
'libc.so.6'
>>> find_library("bz2")
'libbz2.so.1.0'
>>>
\end{verbatim}
On OS X, \code{find{\_}library} tries several predefined naming schemes and
paths to locate the library, and returns a full pathname if successfull:
\begin{verbatim}
>>> from ctypes.util import find_library
>>> find_library("c")
'/usr/lib/libc.dylib'
>>> find_library("m")
'/usr/lib/libm.dylib'
>>> find_library("bz2")
'/usr/lib/libbz2.dylib'
>>> find_library("AGL")
'/System/Library/Frameworks/AGL.framework/AGL'
>>>
\end{verbatim}
On Windows, \code{find{\_}library} searches along the system search path,
and returns the full pathname, but since there is no predefined naming
scheme a call like \code{find{\_}library("c")} will fail and return
\code{None}.
If wrapping a shared library with \code{ctypes}, it \emph{may} be better to
determine the shared library name at development type, and hardcode
that into the wrapper module instead of using \code{find{\_}library} to
locate the library at runtime.
\subsubsection{Loading shared libraries\label{ctypes-loading-shared-libraries}}
There are several ways to loaded shared libraries into the Python
process. One way is to instantiate one of the following classes:
\begin{classdesc}{CDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None} \begin{classdesc}{CDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None}
XXX Instances of this class represent loaded shared libraries.
Functions in these libraries use the standard C calling
convention, and are assumed to return \code{int}.
\end{classdesc} \end{classdesc}
\begin{datadescni}{cdll} \begin{classdesc}{OleDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None}
XXX Windows only: Instances of this class represent loaded shared
\end{datadescni} libraries, functions in these libraries use the \code{stdcall}
calling convention, and are assumed to return the windows specific
\class{HRESULT} code. \class{HRESULT} values contain information
specifying whether the function call failed or succeeded, together
with additional error code. If the return value signals a
failure, an \class{WindowsError} is automatically raised.
\end{classdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}{OleDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None} \begin{classdesc}{WinDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None}
XXX Windows only: Instances of this class represent loaded shared
\end{funcdesc} libraries, functions in these libraries use the \code{stdcall}
calling convention, and are assumed to return \code{int} by default.
\begin{datadescni}{oledll} On Windows CE only the standard calling convention is used, for
XXX convenience the \class{WinDLL} and \class{OleDLL} use the standard calling
\end{datadescni} convention on this platform.
\end{classdesc}
\begin{classdesc*}{py_object} The Python GIL is released before calling any function exported by
XXX these libraries, and reaquired afterwards.
\end{classdesc*}
\begin{funcdesc}{PyDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None} \begin{classdesc}{PyDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None}
XXX Instances of this class behave like \class{CDLL} instances, except
\end{funcdesc} that the Python GIL is \emph{not} released during the function call,
and after the function execution the Python error flag is checked.
If the error flag is set, a Python exception is raised.
\begin{datadescni}{pydll} Thus, this is only useful to call Python C api functions directly.
XXX \end{classdesc}
\end{datadescni}
All these classes can be instantiated by calling them with at least
one argument, the pathname of the shared library. If you have an
existing handle to an already loaded shard library, it can be passed
as the \code{handle} named parameter, otherwise the underlying platforms
\code{dlopen} or \method{LoadLibrary} function is used to load the library
into the process, and to get a handle to it.
The \var{mode} parameter can be used to specify how the library is
loaded. For details, consult the \code{dlopen(3)} manpage, on Windows,
\var{mode} is ignored.
\begin{datadescni}{RTLD_GLOBAL} \begin{datadescni}{RTLD_GLOBAL}
XXX Flag to use as \var{mode} parameter. On platforms where this flag
is not available, it is defined as the integer zero.
\end{datadescni} \end{datadescni}
\begin{datadescni}{RTLD_LOCAL} \begin{datadescni}{RTLD_LOCAL}
XXX Flag to use as \var{mode} parameter. On platforms where this is not
available, it is the same as \var{RTLD{\_}GLOBAL}.
\end{datadescni} \end{datadescni}
\begin{funcdesc}{WinDLL}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None} Instances of these classes have no public methods, however
XXX \method{{\_}{\_}getattr{\_}{\_}} and \method{{\_}{\_}getitem{\_}{\_}} have special behaviour: functions
\end{funcdesc} exported by the shared library can be accessed as attributes of by
index. Please note that both \method{{\_}{\_}getattr{\_}{\_}} and \method{{\_}{\_}getitem{\_}{\_}}
cache their result, so calling them repeatedly returns the same object
each time.
The following public attributes are available, their name starts with
an underscore to not clash with exported function names:
\begin{datadescni}{_handle: memberdesc}
The system handle used to access the library.
\end{datadescni}
\begin{datadescni}{_name: memberdesc}
The name of the library passed in the contructor.
\end{datadescni}
Shared libraries can also be loaded by using one of the prefabricated
objects, which are instances of the \class{LibraryLoader} class, either by
calling the \method{LoadLibrary} method, or by retrieving the library as
attribute of the loader instance.
\begin{classdesc}{LibraryLoader}{dlltype}
Class which loads shared libraries. \code{dlltype} should be one
of the \class{CDLL}, \class{PyDLL}, \class{WinDLL}, or \class{OleDLL} types.
\method{{\_}{\_}getattr{\_}{\_}} has special behaviour: It allows to load a shared
library by accessing it as attribute of a library loader
instance. The result is cached, so repeated attribute accesses
return the same library each time.
\end{classdesc}
\begin{methoddesc}{LoadLibrary}{name, mode=RTLD_LOCAL, handle=None}
Load a shared library into the process and return it. This method
always creates a new instance of the library. All three
parameters are passed to the constructor of the library object.
\end{methoddesc}
These prefabricated library loaders are available:
\begin{datadescni}{cdll}
Loads \class{CDLL} instances.
\end{datadescni}
\begin{datadescni}{windll} \begin{datadescni}{windll}
XXX Windows only: Loads \class{WinDLL} instances.
\end{datadescni} \end{datadescni}
\begin{datadescni}{pythonapi()} \begin{datadescni}{oledll}
XXX Windows only: Loads \class{OleDLL} instances.
\end{datadescni}
\begin{datadescni}{pydll}
Loads \class{PyDLL} instances.
\end{datadescni}
For accessing the C Python api directly, a ready-to-use Python shared
library object is available:
\begin{datadescni}{pythonapi}
An instance of \class{PyDLL} that exposes Python C api functions as
attributes. Note that all these functions are assumed to return
integers, which is of course not always the truth, so you have to
assign the correct \member{restype} attribute.
\end{datadescni} \end{datadescni}
...@@ -1647,7 +1777,7 @@ must be a string specifying an encoding, like \code{'utf-8'} or ...@@ -1647,7 +1777,7 @@ must be a string specifying an encoding, like \code{'utf-8'} or
on encoding/decoding errors. Examples of possible values are on encoding/decoding errors. Examples of possible values are
\code{"strict"}, \code{"replace"}, or \code{"ignore"}. \code{"strict"}, \code{"replace"}, or \code{"ignore"}.
set{\_}conversion{\_}mode returns a 2-tuple containing the previous \code{set{\_}conversion{\_}mode} returns a 2-tuple containing the previous
conversion rules. On windows, the initial conversion rules are conversion rules. On windows, the initial conversion rules are
\code{('mbcs', 'ignore')}, on other systems \code{('ascii', 'strict')}. \code{('mbcs', 'ignore')}, on other systems \code{('ascii', 'strict')}.
\end{funcdesc} \end{funcdesc}
...@@ -1917,6 +2047,10 @@ Windows only: Represents a \class{HRESULT} value, which contains success ...@@ -1917,6 +2047,10 @@ Windows only: Represents a \class{HRESULT} value, which contains success
or error information for a function or method call. or error information for a function or method call.
\end{classdesc*} \end{classdesc*}
\begin{classdesc*}{py_object}
Represents the C \code{PyObject *} datatype.
\end{classdesc*}
\subsubsection{Structured data types\label{ctypes-structured-data-types}} \subsubsection{Structured data types\label{ctypes-structured-data-types}}
......
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment