]>
git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blob - wxPython/distutils/ccompiler.py
3 Contains CCompiler, an abstract base class that defines the interface
4 for the Distutils compiler abstraction model."""
6 # This module should be kept compatible with Python 1.5.2.
13 from distutils
.errors
import *
14 from distutils
.spawn
import spawn
15 from distutils
.file_util
import move_file
16 from distutils
.dir_util
import mkpath
17 from distutils
.dep_util
import newer_pairwise
, newer_group
18 from distutils
.sysconfig
import python_build
19 from distutils
.util
import split_quoted
, execute
20 from distutils
import log
23 """Abstract base class to define the interface that must be implemented
24 by real compiler classes. Also has some utility methods used by
25 several compiler classes.
27 The basic idea behind a compiler abstraction class is that each
28 instance can be used for all the compile/link steps in building a
29 single project. Thus, attributes common to all of those compile and
30 link steps -- include directories, macros to define, libraries to link
31 against, etc. -- are attributes of the compiler instance. To allow for
32 variability in how individual files are treated, most of those
33 attributes may be varied on a per-compilation or per-link basis.
36 # 'compiler_type' is a class attribute that identifies this class. It
37 # keeps code that wants to know what kind of compiler it's dealing with
38 # from having to import all possible compiler classes just to do an
39 # 'isinstance'. In concrete CCompiler subclasses, 'compiler_type'
40 # should really, really be one of the keys of the 'compiler_class'
41 # dictionary (see below -- used by the 'new_compiler()' factory
42 # function) -- authors of new compiler interface classes are
43 # responsible for updating 'compiler_class'!
46 # XXX things not handled by this compiler abstraction model:
47 # * client can't provide additional options for a compiler,
48 # e.g. warning, optimization, debugging flags. Perhaps this
49 # should be the domain of concrete compiler abstraction classes
50 # (UnixCCompiler, MSVCCompiler, etc.) -- or perhaps the base
51 # class should have methods for the common ones.
52 # * can't completely override the include or library searchg
53 # path, ie. no "cc -I -Idir1 -Idir2" or "cc -L -Ldir1 -Ldir2".
54 # I'm not sure how widely supported this is even by Unix
55 # compilers, much less on other platforms. And I'm even less
56 # sure how useful it is; maybe for cross-compiling, but
57 # support for that is a ways off. (And anyways, cross
58 # compilers probably have a dedicated binary with the
59 # right paths compiled in. I hope.)
60 # * can't do really freaky things with the library list/library
61 # dirs, e.g. "-Ldir1 -lfoo -Ldir2 -lfoo" to link against
62 # different versions of libfoo.a in different locations. I
63 # think this is useless without the ability to null out the
64 # library search path anyways.
67 # Subclasses that rely on the standard filename generation methods
68 # implemented below should override these; see the comment near
69 # those methods ('object_filenames()' et. al.) for details:
70 src_extensions
= None # list of strings
71 obj_extension
= None # string
72 static_lib_extension
= None
73 shared_lib_extension
= None # string
74 static_lib_format
= None # format string
75 shared_lib_format
= None # prob. same as static_lib_format
76 exe_extension
= None # string
78 # Default language settings. language_map is used to detect a source
79 # file or Extension target language, checking source filenames.
80 # language_order is used to detect the language precedence, when deciding
81 # what language to use when mixing source types. For example, if some
82 # extension has two files with ".c" extension, and one with ".cpp", it
83 # is still linked as c++.
84 language_map
= {".c" : "c",
90 language_order
= ["c++", "objc", "c"]
97 self
.dry_run
= dry_run
99 self
.verbose
= verbose
101 # 'output_dir': a common output directory for object, library,
102 # shared object, and shared library files
103 self
.output_dir
= None
105 # 'macros': a list of macro definitions (or undefinitions). A
106 # macro definition is a 2-tuple (name, value), where the value is
107 # either a string or None (no explicit value). A macro
108 # undefinition is a 1-tuple (name,).
111 # 'include_dirs': a list of directories to search for include files
112 self
.include_dirs
= []
114 # 'libraries': a list of libraries to include in any link
115 # (library names, not filenames: eg. "foo" not "libfoo.a")
118 # 'library_dirs': a list of directories to search for libraries
119 self
.library_dirs
= []
121 # 'runtime_library_dirs': a list of directories to search for
122 # shared libraries/objects at runtime
123 self
.runtime_library_dirs
= []
125 # 'objects': a list of object files (or similar, such as explicitly
126 # named library files) to include on any link
129 for key
in self
.executables
.keys():
130 self
.set_executable(key
, self
.executables
[key
])
135 def set_executables (self
, **args
):
137 """Define the executables (and options for them) that will be run
138 to perform the various stages of compilation. The exact set of
139 executables that may be specified here depends on the compiler
140 class (via the 'executables' class attribute), but most will have:
141 compiler the C/C++ compiler
142 linker_so linker used to create shared objects and libraries
143 linker_exe linker used to create binary executables
144 archiver static library creator
146 On platforms with a command-line (Unix, DOS/Windows), each of these
147 is a string that will be split into executable name and (optional)
148 list of arguments. (Splitting the string is done similarly to how
149 Unix shells operate: words are delimited by spaces, but quotes and
150 backslashes can override this. See
151 'distutils.util.split_quoted()'.)
154 # Note that some CCompiler implementation classes will define class
155 # attributes 'cpp', 'cc', etc. with hard-coded executable names;
156 # this is appropriate when a compiler class is for exactly one
157 # compiler/OS combination (eg. MSVCCompiler). Other compiler
158 # classes (UnixCCompiler, in particular) are driven by information
159 # discovered at run-time, since there are many different ways to do
160 # basically the same things with Unix C compilers.
162 for key
in args
.keys():
163 if not self
.executables
.has_key(key
):
165 "unknown executable '%s' for class %s" % \
166 (key
, self
.__class
__.__name
__)
167 self
.set_executable(key
, args
[key
])
171 def set_executable(self
, key
, value
):
172 if type(value
) is StringType
:
173 setattr(self
, key
, split_quoted(value
))
175 setattr(self
, key
, value
)
178 def _find_macro (self
, name
):
180 for defn
in self
.macros
:
188 def _check_macro_definitions (self
, definitions
):
189 """Ensures that every element of 'definitions' is a valid macro
190 definition, ie. either (name,value) 2-tuple or a (name,) tuple. Do
191 nothing if all definitions are OK, raise TypeError otherwise.
193 for defn
in definitions
:
194 if not (type (defn
) is TupleType
and
197 (type (defn
[1]) is StringType
or defn
[1] is None))) and
198 type (defn
[0]) is StringType
):
200 ("invalid macro definition '%s': " % defn
) + \
201 "must be tuple (string,), (string, string), or " + \
205 # -- Bookkeeping methods -------------------------------------------
207 def define_macro (self
, name
, value
=None):
208 """Define a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this
209 compiler object. The optional parameter 'value' should be a
210 string; if it is not supplied, then the macro will be defined
211 without an explicit value and the exact outcome depends on the
212 compiler used (XXX true? does ANSI say anything about this?)
214 # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if
215 # already there (so that this one will take precedence).
216 i
= self
._find
_macro
(name
)
221 self
.macros
.append (defn
)
224 def undefine_macro (self
, name
):
225 """Undefine a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by
226 this compiler object. If the same macro is defined by
227 'define_macro()' and undefined by 'undefine_macro()' the last call
228 takes precedence (including multiple redefinitions or
229 undefinitions). If the macro is redefined/undefined on a
230 per-compilation basis (ie. in the call to 'compile()'), then that
233 # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if
234 # already there (so that this one will take precedence).
235 i
= self
._find
_macro
(name
)
240 self
.macros
.append (undefn
)
243 def add_include_dir (self
, dir):
244 """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
245 header files. The compiler is instructed to search directories in
246 the order in which they are supplied by successive calls to
249 self
.include_dirs
.append (dir)
251 def set_include_dirs (self
, dirs
):
252 """Set the list of directories that will be searched to 'dirs' (a
253 list of strings). Overrides any preceding calls to
254 'add_include_dir()'; subsequence calls to 'add_include_dir()' add
255 to the list passed to 'set_include_dirs()'. This does not affect
256 any list of standard include directories that the compiler may
259 self
.include_dirs
= copy (dirs
)
262 def add_library (self
, libname
):
263 """Add 'libname' to the list of libraries that will be included in
264 all links driven by this compiler object. Note that 'libname'
265 should *not* be the name of a file containing a library, but the
266 name of the library itself: the actual filename will be inferred by
267 the linker, the compiler, or the compiler class (depending on the
270 The linker will be instructed to link against libraries in the
271 order they were supplied to 'add_library()' and/or
272 'set_libraries()'. It is perfectly valid to duplicate library
273 names; the linker will be instructed to link against libraries as
274 many times as they are mentioned.
276 self
.libraries
.append (libname
)
278 def set_libraries (self
, libnames
):
279 """Set the list of libraries to be included in all links driven by
280 this compiler object to 'libnames' (a list of strings). This does
281 not affect any standard system libraries that the linker may
284 self
.libraries
= copy (libnames
)
287 def add_library_dir (self
, dir):
288 """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
289 libraries specified to 'add_library()' and 'set_libraries()'. The
290 linker will be instructed to search for libraries in the order they
291 are supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or 'set_library_dirs()'.
293 self
.library_dirs
.append (dir)
295 def set_library_dirs (self
, dirs
):
296 """Set the list of library search directories to 'dirs' (a list of
297 strings). This does not affect any standard library search path
298 that the linker may search by default.
300 self
.library_dirs
= copy (dirs
)
303 def add_runtime_library_dir (self
, dir):
304 """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
305 shared libraries at runtime.
307 self
.runtime_library_dirs
.append (dir)
309 def set_runtime_library_dirs (self
, dirs
):
310 """Set the list of directories to search for shared libraries at
311 runtime to 'dirs' (a list of strings). This does not affect any
312 standard search path that the runtime linker may search by
315 self
.runtime_library_dirs
= copy (dirs
)
318 def add_link_object (self
, object):
319 """Add 'object' to the list of object files (or analogues, such as
320 explicitly named library files or the output of "resource
321 compilers") to be included in every link driven by this compiler
324 self
.objects
.append (object)
326 def set_link_objects (self
, objects
):
327 """Set the list of object files (or analogues) to be included in
328 every link to 'objects'. This does not affect any standard object
329 files that the linker may include by default (such as system
332 self
.objects
= copy (objects
)
335 # -- Private utility methods --------------------------------------
336 # (here for the convenience of subclasses)
338 # Helper method to prep compiler in subclass compile() methods
340 def _setup_compile(self
, outdir
, macros
, incdirs
, sources
, depends
,
342 """Process arguments and decide which source files to compile.
344 Merges _fix_compile_args() and _prep_compile().
347 outdir
= self
.output_dir
348 elif type(outdir
) is not StringType
:
349 raise TypeError, "'output_dir' must be a string or None"
353 elif type(macros
) is ListType
:
354 macros
= macros
+ (self
.macros
or [])
356 raise TypeError, "'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples"
359 incdirs
= self
.include_dirs
360 elif type(incdirs
) in (ListType
, TupleType
):
361 incdirs
= list(incdirs
) + (self
.include_dirs
or [])
364 "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings"
369 # Get the list of expected output (object) files
370 objects
= self
.object_filenames(sources
,
371 strip_dir
=python_build
,
373 assert len(objects
) == len(sources
)
375 # XXX should redo this code to eliminate skip_source entirely.
376 # XXX instead create build and issue skip messages inline
379 skip_source
= {} # rebuild everything
380 for source
in sources
:
381 skip_source
[source
] = 0
382 elif depends
is None:
383 # If depends is None, figure out which source files we
384 # have to recompile according to a simplistic check. We
385 # just compare the source and object file, no deep
386 # dependency checking involving header files.
387 skip_source
= {} # rebuild everything
388 for source
in sources
: # no wait, rebuild nothing
389 skip_source
[source
] = 1
391 n_sources
, n_objects
= newer_pairwise(sources
, objects
)
392 for source
in n_sources
: # no really, only rebuild what's
393 skip_source
[source
] = 0 # out-of-date
395 # If depends is a list of files, then do a different
396 # simplistic check. Assume that each object depends on
397 # its source and all files in the depends list.
399 # L contains all the depends plus a spot at the end for a
400 # particular source file
401 L
= depends
[:] + [None]
402 for i
in range(len(objects
)):
405 if newer_group(L
, objects
[i
]):
406 skip_source
[source
] = 0
408 skip_source
[source
] = 1
410 pp_opts
= gen_preprocess_options(macros
, incdirs
)
413 for i
in range(len(sources
)):
416 ext
= os
.path
.splitext(src
)[1]
417 self
.mkpath(os
.path
.dirname(obj
))
419 log
.debug("skipping %s (%s up-to-date)", src
, obj
)
421 build
[obj
] = src
, ext
423 return macros
, objects
, extra
, pp_opts
, build
425 def _get_cc_args(self
, pp_opts
, debug
, before
):
426 # works for unixccompiler, emxccompiler, cygwinccompiler
427 cc_args
= pp_opts
+ ['-c']
434 def _fix_compile_args (self
, output_dir
, macros
, include_dirs
):
435 """Typecheck and fix-up some of the arguments to the 'compile()'
436 method, and return fixed-up values. Specifically: if 'output_dir'
437 is None, replaces it with 'self.output_dir'; ensures that 'macros'
438 is a list, and augments it with 'self.macros'; ensures that
439 'include_dirs' is a list, and augments it with 'self.include_dirs'.
440 Guarantees that the returned values are of the correct type,
441 i.e. for 'output_dir' either string or None, and for 'macros' and
442 'include_dirs' either list or None.
444 if output_dir
is None:
445 output_dir
= self
.output_dir
446 elif type (output_dir
) is not StringType
:
447 raise TypeError, "'output_dir' must be a string or None"
451 elif type (macros
) is ListType
:
452 macros
= macros
+ (self
.macros
or [])
454 raise TypeError, "'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples"
456 if include_dirs
is None:
457 include_dirs
= self
.include_dirs
458 elif type (include_dirs
) in (ListType
, TupleType
):
459 include_dirs
= list (include_dirs
) + (self
.include_dirs
or [])
462 "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings"
464 return output_dir
, macros
, include_dirs
466 # _fix_compile_args ()
469 def _prep_compile(self
, sources
, output_dir
, depends
=None):
470 """Decide which souce files must be recompiled.
472 Determine the list of object files corresponding to 'sources',
473 and figure out which ones really need to be recompiled.
474 Return a list of all object files and a dictionary telling
475 which source files can be skipped.
477 # Get the list of expected output (object) files
478 objects
= self
.object_filenames(sources
, strip_dir
=python_build
,
479 output_dir
=output_dir
)
480 assert len(objects
) == len(sources
)
483 skip_source
= {} # rebuild everything
484 for source
in sources
:
485 skip_source
[source
] = 0
486 elif depends
is None:
487 # If depends is None, figure out which source files we
488 # have to recompile according to a simplistic check. We
489 # just compare the source and object file, no deep
490 # dependency checking involving header files.
491 skip_source
= {} # rebuild everything
492 for source
in sources
: # no wait, rebuild nothing
493 skip_source
[source
] = 1
495 n_sources
, n_objects
= newer_pairwise(sources
, objects
)
496 for source
in n_sources
: # no really, only rebuild what's
497 skip_source
[source
] = 0 # out-of-date
499 # If depends is a list of files, then do a different
500 # simplistic check. Assume that each object depends on
501 # its source and all files in the depends list.
503 # L contains all the depends plus a spot at the end for a
504 # particular source file
505 L
= depends
[:] + [None]
506 for i
in range(len(objects
)):
509 if newer_group(L
, objects
[i
]):
510 skip_source
[source
] = 0
512 skip_source
[source
] = 1
514 return objects
, skip_source
519 def _fix_object_args (self
, objects
, output_dir
):
520 """Typecheck and fix up some arguments supplied to various methods.
521 Specifically: ensure that 'objects' is a list; if output_dir is
522 None, replace with self.output_dir. Return fixed versions of
523 'objects' and 'output_dir'.
525 if type (objects
) not in (ListType
, TupleType
):
527 "'objects' must be a list or tuple of strings"
528 objects
= list (objects
)
530 if output_dir
is None:
531 output_dir
= self
.output_dir
532 elif type (output_dir
) is not StringType
:
533 raise TypeError, "'output_dir' must be a string or None"
535 return (objects
, output_dir
)
538 def _fix_lib_args (self
, libraries
, library_dirs
, runtime_library_dirs
):
539 """Typecheck and fix up some of the arguments supplied to the
540 'link_*' methods. Specifically: ensure that all arguments are
541 lists, and augment them with their permanent versions
542 (eg. 'self.libraries' augments 'libraries'). Return a tuple with
543 fixed versions of all arguments.
545 if libraries
is None:
546 libraries
= self
.libraries
547 elif type (libraries
) in (ListType
, TupleType
):
548 libraries
= list (libraries
) + (self
.libraries
or [])
551 "'libraries' (if supplied) must be a list of strings"
553 if library_dirs
is None:
554 library_dirs
= self
.library_dirs
555 elif type (library_dirs
) in (ListType
, TupleType
):
556 library_dirs
= list (library_dirs
) + (self
.library_dirs
or [])
559 "'library_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings"
561 if runtime_library_dirs
is None:
562 runtime_library_dirs
= self
.runtime_library_dirs
563 elif type (runtime_library_dirs
) in (ListType
, TupleType
):
564 runtime_library_dirs
= (list (runtime_library_dirs
) +
565 (self
.runtime_library_dirs
or []))
568 "'runtime_library_dirs' (if supplied) " + \
569 "must be a list of strings"
571 return (libraries
, library_dirs
, runtime_library_dirs
)
576 def _need_link (self
, objects
, output_file
):
577 """Return true if we need to relink the files listed in 'objects'
578 to recreate 'output_file'.
584 newer
= newer_group (objects
, output_file
, missing
='newer')
586 newer
= newer_group (objects
, output_file
)
591 def detect_language (self
, sources
):
592 """Detect the language of a given file, or list of files. Uses
593 language_map, and language_order to do the job.
595 if type(sources
) is not ListType
:
598 index
= len(self
.language_order
)
599 for source
in sources
:
600 base
, ext
= os
.path
.splitext(source
)
601 extlang
= self
.language_map
.get(ext
)
603 extindex
= self
.language_order
.index(extlang
)
613 # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
614 # (must be implemented by subclasses)
616 def preprocess (self
,
622 extra_postargs
=None):
623 """Preprocess a single C/C++ source file, named in 'source'.
624 Output will be written to file named 'output_file', or stdout if
625 'output_file' not supplied. 'macros' is a list of macro
626 definitions as for 'compile()', which will augment the macros set
627 with 'define_macro()' and 'undefine_macro()'. 'include_dirs' is a
628 list of directory names that will be added to the default list.
630 Raises PreprocessError on failure.
634 def compile(self
, sources
, output_dir
=None, macros
=None,
635 include_dirs
=None, debug
=0, extra_preargs
=None,
636 extra_postargs
=None, depends
=None):
637 """Compile one or more source files.
639 'sources' must be a list of filenames, most likely C/C++
640 files, but in reality anything that can be handled by a
641 particular compiler and compiler class (eg. MSVCCompiler can
642 handle resource files in 'sources'). Return a list of object
643 filenames, one per source filename in 'sources'. Depending on
644 the implementation, not all source files will necessarily be
645 compiled, but all corresponding object filenames will be
648 If 'output_dir' is given, object files will be put under it, while
649 retaining their original path component. That is, "foo/bar.c"
650 normally compiles to "foo/bar.o" (for a Unix implementation); if
651 'output_dir' is "build", then it would compile to
654 'macros', if given, must be a list of macro definitions. A macro
655 definition is either a (name, value) 2-tuple or a (name,) 1-tuple.
656 The former defines a macro; if the value is None, the macro is
657 defined without an explicit value. The 1-tuple case undefines a
658 macro. Later definitions/redefinitions/ undefinitions take
661 'include_dirs', if given, must be a list of strings, the
662 directories to add to the default include file search path for this
665 'debug' is a boolean; if true, the compiler will be instructed to
666 output debug symbols in (or alongside) the object file(s).
668 'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are implementation- dependent.
669 On platforms that have the notion of a command-line (e.g. Unix,
670 DOS/Windows), they are most likely lists of strings: extra
671 command-line arguments to prepand/append to the compiler command
672 line. On other platforms, consult the implementation class
673 documentation. In any event, they are intended as an escape hatch
674 for those occasions when the abstract compiler framework doesn't
677 'depends', if given, is a list of filenames that all targets
678 depend on. If a source file is older than any file in
679 depends, then the source file will be recompiled. This
680 supports dependency tracking, but only at a coarse
683 Raises CompileError on failure.
686 # A concrete compiler class can either override this method
687 # entirely or implement _compile().
689 macros
, objects
, extra_postargs
, pp_opts
, build
= \
690 self
._setup
_compile
(output_dir
, macros
, include_dirs
, sources
,
691 depends
, extra_postargs
)
692 cc_args
= self
._get
_cc
_args
(pp_opts
, debug
, extra_preargs
)
694 for obj
, (src
, ext
) in build
.items():
695 self
._compile
(obj
, src
, ext
, cc_args
, extra_postargs
, pp_opts
)
697 # Return *all* object filenames, not just the ones we just built.
700 def _compile(self
, obj
, src
, ext
, cc_args
, extra_postargs
, pp_opts
):
701 """Compile 'src' to product 'obj'."""
703 # A concrete compiler class that does not override compile()
704 # should implement _compile().
707 def create_static_lib (self
,
713 """Link a bunch of stuff together to create a static library file.
714 The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied
715 as 'objects', the extra object files supplied to
716 'add_link_object()' and/or 'set_link_objects()', the libraries
717 supplied to 'add_library()' and/or 'set_libraries()', and the
718 libraries supplied as 'libraries' (if any).
720 'output_libname' should be a library name, not a filename; the
721 filename will be inferred from the library name. 'output_dir' is
722 the directory where the library file will be put.
724 'debug' is a boolean; if true, debugging information will be
725 included in the library (note that on most platforms, it is the
726 compile step where this matters: the 'debug' flag is included here
727 just for consistency).
729 'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects
730 are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of
733 Raises LibError on failure.
738 # values for target_desc parameter in link()
739 SHARED_OBJECT
= "shared_object"
740 SHARED_LIBRARY
= "shared_library"
741 EXECUTABLE
= "executable"
750 runtime_library_dirs
=None,
757 """Link a bunch of stuff together to create an executable or
760 The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied
761 as 'objects'. 'output_filename' should be a filename. If
762 'output_dir' is supplied, 'output_filename' is relative to it
763 (i.e. 'output_filename' can provide directory components if
766 'libraries' is a list of libraries to link against. These are
767 library names, not filenames, since they're translated into
768 filenames in a platform-specific way (eg. "foo" becomes "libfoo.a"
769 on Unix and "foo.lib" on DOS/Windows). However, they can include a
770 directory component, which means the linker will look in that
771 specific directory rather than searching all the normal locations.
773 'library_dirs', if supplied, should be a list of directories to
774 search for libraries that were specified as bare library names
775 (ie. no directory component). These are on top of the system
776 default and those supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or
777 'set_library_dirs()'. 'runtime_library_dirs' is a list of
778 directories that will be embedded into the shared library and used
779 to search for other shared libraries that *it* depends on at
780 run-time. (This may only be relevant on Unix.)
782 'export_symbols' is a list of symbols that the shared library will
783 export. (This appears to be relevant only on Windows.)
785 'debug' is as for 'compile()' and 'create_static_lib()', with the
786 slight distinction that it actually matters on most platforms (as
787 opposed to 'create_static_lib()', which includes a 'debug' flag
788 mostly for form's sake).
790 'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are as for 'compile()' (except
791 of course that they supply command-line arguments for the
792 particular linker being used).
794 'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects
795 are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of
798 Raises LinkError on failure.
800 raise NotImplementedError
803 # Old 'link_*()' methods, rewritten to use the new 'link()' method.
805 def link_shared_lib (self
,
811 runtime_library_dirs
=None,
818 self
.link(CCompiler
.SHARED_LIBRARY
, objects
,
819 self
.library_filename(output_libname
, lib_type
='shared'),
821 libraries
, library_dirs
, runtime_library_dirs
,
822 export_symbols
, debug
,
823 extra_preargs
, extra_postargs
, build_temp
, target_lang
)
826 def link_shared_object (self
,
832 runtime_library_dirs
=None,
839 self
.link(CCompiler
.SHARED_OBJECT
, objects
,
840 output_filename
, output_dir
,
841 libraries
, library_dirs
, runtime_library_dirs
,
842 export_symbols
, debug
,
843 extra_preargs
, extra_postargs
, build_temp
, target_lang
)
846 def link_executable (self
,
852 runtime_library_dirs
=None,
857 self
.link(CCompiler
.EXECUTABLE
, objects
,
858 self
.executable_filename(output_progname
), output_dir
,
859 libraries
, library_dirs
, runtime_library_dirs
, None,
860 debug
, extra_preargs
, extra_postargs
, None, target_lang
)
863 # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
864 # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function; there is
865 # no appropriate default implementation so subclasses should
866 # implement all of these.
868 def library_dir_option (self
, dir):
869 """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of
870 directories searched for libraries.
872 raise NotImplementedError
874 def runtime_library_dir_option (self
, dir):
875 """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of
876 directories searched for runtime libraries.
878 raise NotImplementedError
880 def library_option (self
, lib
):
881 """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of libraries
882 linked into the shared library or executable.
884 raise NotImplementedError
886 def find_library_file (self
, dirs
, lib
, debug
=0):
887 """Search the specified list of directories for a static or shared
888 library file 'lib' and return the full path to that file. If
889 'debug' true, look for a debugging version (if that makes sense on
890 the current platform). Return None if 'lib' wasn't found in any of
891 the specified directories.
893 raise NotImplementedError
895 # -- Filename generation methods -----------------------------------
897 # The default implementation of the filename generating methods are
898 # prejudiced towards the Unix/DOS/Windows view of the world:
899 # * object files are named by replacing the source file extension
900 # (eg. .c/.cpp -> .o/.obj)
901 # * library files (shared or static) are named by plugging the
902 # library name and extension into a format string, eg.
903 # "lib%s.%s" % (lib_name, ".a") for Unix static libraries
904 # * executables are named by appending an extension (possibly
905 # empty) to the program name: eg. progname + ".exe" for
908 # To reduce redundant code, these methods expect to find
909 # several attributes in the current object (presumably defined
910 # as class attributes):
912 # list of C/C++ source file extensions, eg. ['.c', '.cpp']
914 # object file extension, eg. '.o' or '.obj'
915 # * static_lib_extension -
916 # extension for static library files, eg. '.a' or '.lib'
917 # * shared_lib_extension -
918 # extension for shared library/object files, eg. '.so', '.dll'
919 # * static_lib_format -
920 # format string for generating static library filenames,
921 # eg. 'lib%s.%s' or '%s.%s'
922 # * shared_lib_format
923 # format string for generating shared library filenames
924 # (probably same as static_lib_format, since the extension
925 # is one of the intended parameters to the format string)
927 # extension for executable files, eg. '' or '.exe'
929 def object_filenames(self
, source_filenames
, strip_dir
=0, output_dir
=''):
930 if output_dir
is None:
933 for src_name
in source_filenames
:
934 base
, ext
= os
.path
.splitext(src_name
)
935 if ext
not in self
.src_extensions
:
936 raise UnknownFileError
, \
937 "unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % (ext
, src_name
)
939 base
= os
.path
.basename(base
)
940 obj_names
.append(os
.path
.join(output_dir
,
941 base
+ self
.obj_extension
))
944 def shared_object_filename(self
, basename
, strip_dir
=0, output_dir
=''):
945 assert output_dir
is not None
947 basename
= os
.path
.basename (basename
)
948 return os
.path
.join(output_dir
, basename
+ self
.shared_lib_extension
)
950 def executable_filename(self
, basename
, strip_dir
=0, output_dir
=''):
951 assert output_dir
is not None
953 basename
= os
.path
.basename (basename
)
954 return os
.path
.join(output_dir
, basename
+ (self
.exe_extension
or ''))
956 def library_filename(self
, libname
, lib_type
='static', # or 'shared'
957 strip_dir
=0, output_dir
=''):
958 assert output_dir
is not None
959 if lib_type
not in ("static", "shared", "dylib"):
960 raise ValueError, "'lib_type' must be \"static\", \"shared\" or \"dylib\""
961 fmt
= getattr(self
, lib_type
+ "_lib_format")
962 ext
= getattr(self
, lib_type
+ "_lib_extension")
964 dir, base
= os
.path
.split (libname
)
965 filename
= fmt
% (base
, ext
)
969 return os
.path
.join(output_dir
, dir, filename
)
972 # -- Utility methods -----------------------------------------------
974 def announce (self
, msg
, level
=1):
977 def debug_print (self
, msg
):
978 from distutils
.debug
import DEBUG
982 def warn (self
, msg
):
983 sys
.stderr
.write ("warning: %s\n" % msg
)
985 def execute (self
, func
, args
, msg
=None, level
=1):
986 execute(func
, args
, msg
, self
.dry_run
)
988 def spawn (self
, cmd
):
989 spawn (cmd
, dry_run
=self
.dry_run
)
991 def move_file (self
, src
, dst
):
992 return move_file (src
, dst
, dry_run
=self
.dry_run
)
994 def mkpath (self
, name
, mode
=0777):
995 mkpath (name
, mode
, self
.dry_run
)
1001 # Map a sys.platform/os.name ('posix', 'nt') to the default compiler
1002 # type for that platform. Keys are interpreted as re match
1003 # patterns. Order is important; platform mappings are preferred over
1005 _default_compilers
= (
1007 # Platform string mappings
1009 # on a cygwin built python we can use gcc like an ordinary UNIXish
1011 ('cygwin.*', 'unix'),
1021 def get_default_compiler(osname
=None, platform
=None):
1023 """ Determine the default compiler to use for the given platform.
1025 osname should be one of the standard Python OS names (i.e. the
1026 ones returned by os.name) and platform the common value
1027 returned by sys.platform for the platform in question.
1029 The default values are os.name and sys.platform in case the
1030 parameters are not given.
1035 if platform
is None:
1036 platform
= sys
.platform
1037 for pattern
, compiler
in _default_compilers
:
1038 if re
.match(pattern
, platform
) is not None or \
1039 re
.match(pattern
, osname
) is not None:
1041 # Default to Unix compiler
1044 # Map compiler types to (module_name, class_name) pairs -- ie. where to
1045 # find the code that implements an interface to this compiler. (The module
1046 # is assumed to be in the 'distutils' package.)
1047 compiler_class
= { 'unix': ('unixccompiler', 'UnixCCompiler',
1048 "standard UNIX-style compiler"),
1049 'msvc': ('msvccompiler', 'MSVCCompiler',
1050 "Microsoft Visual C++"),
1051 'cygwin': ('cygwinccompiler', 'CygwinCCompiler',
1052 "Cygwin port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
1053 'mingw32': ('cygwinccompiler', 'Mingw32CCompiler',
1054 "Mingw32 port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
1055 'bcpp': ('bcppcompiler', 'BCPPCompiler',
1056 "Borland C++ Compiler"),
1057 'mwerks': ('mwerkscompiler', 'MWerksCompiler',
1058 "MetroWerks CodeWarrior"),
1059 'emx': ('emxccompiler', 'EMXCCompiler',
1060 "EMX port of GNU C Compiler for OS/2"),
1063 def show_compilers():
1064 """Print list of available compilers (used by the "--help-compiler"
1065 options to "build", "build_ext", "build_clib").
1067 # XXX this "knows" that the compiler option it's describing is
1068 # "--compiler", which just happens to be the case for the three
1069 # commands that use it.
1070 from distutils
.fancy_getopt
import FancyGetopt
1072 for compiler
in compiler_class
.keys():
1073 compilers
.append(("compiler="+compiler
, None,
1074 compiler_class
[compiler
][2]))
1076 pretty_printer
= FancyGetopt(compilers
)
1077 pretty_printer
.print_help("List of available compilers:")
1080 def new_compiler (plat
=None,
1085 """Generate an instance of some CCompiler subclass for the supplied
1086 platform/compiler combination. 'plat' defaults to 'os.name'
1087 (eg. 'posix', 'nt'), and 'compiler' defaults to the default compiler
1088 for that platform. Currently only 'posix' and 'nt' are supported, and
1089 the default compilers are "traditional Unix interface" (UnixCCompiler
1090 class) and Visual C++ (MSVCCompiler class). Note that it's perfectly
1091 possible to ask for a Unix compiler object under Windows, and a
1092 Microsoft compiler object under Unix -- if you supply a value for
1093 'compiler', 'plat' is ignored.
1099 if compiler
is None:
1100 compiler
= get_default_compiler(plat
)
1102 (module_name
, class_name
, long_description
) = compiler_class
[compiler
]
1104 msg
= "don't know how to compile C/C++ code on platform '%s'" % plat
1105 if compiler
is not None:
1106 msg
= msg
+ " with '%s' compiler" % compiler
1107 raise DistutilsPlatformError
, msg
1110 module_name
= "distutils." + module_name
1111 __import__ (module_name
)
1112 module
= sys
.modules
[module_name
]
1113 klass
= vars(module
)[class_name
]
1115 raise DistutilsModuleError
, \
1116 "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to load module '%s'" % \
1119 raise DistutilsModuleError
, \
1120 ("can't compile C/C++ code: unable to find class '%s' " +
1121 "in module '%s'") % (class_name
, module_name
)
1123 # XXX The None is necessary to preserve backwards compatibility
1124 # with classes that expect verbose to be the first positional
1126 return klass (None, dry_run
, force
)
1129 def gen_preprocess_options (macros
, include_dirs
):
1130 """Generate C pre-processor options (-D, -U, -I) as used by at least
1131 two types of compilers: the typical Unix compiler and Visual C++.
1132 'macros' is the usual thing, a list of 1- or 2-tuples, where (name,)
1133 means undefine (-U) macro 'name', and (name,value) means define (-D)
1134 macro 'name' to 'value'. 'include_dirs' is just a list of directory
1135 names to be added to the header file search path (-I). Returns a list
1136 of command-line options suitable for either Unix compilers or Visual
1139 # XXX it would be nice (mainly aesthetic, and so we don't generate
1140 # stupid-looking command lines) to go over 'macros' and eliminate
1141 # redundant definitions/undefinitions (ie. ensure that only the
1142 # latest mention of a particular macro winds up on the command
1143 # line). I don't think it's essential, though, since most (all?)
1144 # Unix C compilers only pay attention to the latest -D or -U
1145 # mention of a macro on their command line. Similar situation for
1146 # 'include_dirs'. I'm punting on both for now. Anyways, weeding out
1147 # redundancies like this should probably be the province of
1148 # CCompiler, since the data structures used are inherited from it
1149 # and therefore common to all CCompiler classes.
1152 for macro
in macros
:
1154 if not (type (macro
) is TupleType
and
1155 1 <= len (macro
) <= 2):
1157 ("bad macro definition '%s': " +
1158 "each element of 'macros' list must be a 1- or 2-tuple") % \
1161 if len (macro
) == 1: # undefine this macro
1162 pp_opts
.append ("-U%s" % macro
[0])
1163 elif len (macro
) == 2:
1164 if macro
[1] is None: # define with no explicit value
1165 pp_opts
.append ("-D%s" % macro
[0])
1167 # XXX *don't* need to be clever about quoting the
1168 # macro value here, because we're going to avoid the
1169 # shell at all costs when we spawn the command!
1170 pp_opts
.append ("-D%s=%s" % macro
)
1172 for dir in include_dirs
:
1173 pp_opts
.append ("-I%s" % dir)
1177 # gen_preprocess_options ()
1180 def gen_lib_options (compiler
, library_dirs
, runtime_library_dirs
, libraries
):
1181 """Generate linker options for searching library directories and
1182 linking with specific libraries. 'libraries' and 'library_dirs' are,
1183 respectively, lists of library names (not filenames!) and search
1184 directories. Returns a list of command-line options suitable for use
1185 with some compiler (depending on the two format strings passed in).
1189 for dir in library_dirs
:
1190 lib_opts
.append (compiler
.library_dir_option (dir))
1192 for dir in runtime_library_dirs
:
1193 lib_opts
.append (compiler
.runtime_library_dir_option (dir))
1195 # XXX it's important that we *not* remove redundant library mentions!
1196 # sometimes you really do have to say "-lfoo -lbar -lfoo" in order to
1197 # resolve all symbols. I just hope we never have to say "-lfoo obj.o
1198 # -lbar" to get things to work -- that's certainly a possibility, but a
1199 # pretty nasty way to arrange your C code.
1201 for lib
in libraries
:
1202 (lib_dir
, lib_name
) = os
.path
.split (lib
)
1204 lib_file
= compiler
.find_library_file ([lib_dir
], lib_name
)
1206 lib_opts
.append (lib_file
)
1208 compiler
.warn ("no library file corresponding to "
1209 "'%s' found (skipping)" % lib
)
1211 lib_opts
.append (compiler
.library_option (lib
))
1215 # gen_lib_options ()