- 16 Jul, 2017 2 commits
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This changes the pointer `cast()` in `PYBIND11_TYPE_CASTER` to recognize the `take_ownership` policy: if casting a pointer with take-ownership, the `cast()` now recalls `cast()` with a dereferenced rvalue (rather than the previous code, which was always calling it with a const lvalue reference), and deletes the pointer after the chained `cast()` is complete. This makes code like: m.def("f", []() { return new std::vector<int>(100, 1); }, py::return_value_policy::take_ownership); do the expected thing by taking over ownership of the returned pointer (which is deleted once the chained cast completes). -
Jason Rhinelander authored
PR #936 broke the ability to return a pointer to a stl container (and, likewise, to a tuple) because the added deduced type matched a non-const pointer argument: the pointer-accepting `cast` in PYBIND11_TYPE_CASTER had a `const type *`, which is a worse match for a non-const pointer than the universal reference template #936 added. This changes the provided TYPE_CASTER cast(ptr) to take the pointer by template arg (so that it will accept either const or non-const pointer). It has two other effects: it slightly reduces .so size (because many type casters never actually need the pointer cast at all), and it allows type casters to provide their untemplated pointer `cast()` that will take precedence over the templated version provided in the macro.
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- 12 Jul, 2017 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
In a Debug build, MSVC doesn't apply copy/move elision as often, triggering a test failure. This relaxes the test count requirements to let the test suite pass.
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- 05 Jul, 2017 2 commits
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This updates the std::tuple, std::pair and `stl.h` type casters to forward their contained value according to whether the container being cast is an lvalue or rvalue reference. This fixes an issue where subcaster casts were always called with a const lvalue which meant nested type casters didn't have the desired `cast()` overload invoked. For example, this caused Eigen values in a tuple to end up with a readonly flag (issue #935) and made it impossible to return a container of move-only types (issue #853). This fixes both issues by adding templated universal reference `cast()` methods to the various container types that forward container elements according to the container reference type.
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Jason Rhinelander authored
The std::pair caster can be written as a special case of the std::tuple caster; this combines them via a base `tuple_caster` class (which is essentially identical to the previous std::tuple caster). This also removes the special empty tuple base case: returning an empty tuple is relatively rare, and the base case still works perfectly well even when the tuple types is an empty list.
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- 03 Jul, 2017 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
When defining method from a member function pointer (e.g. `.def("f", &Derived::f)`) we run into a problem if `&Derived::f` is actually implemented in some base class `Base` when `Base` isn't pybind-registered. This happens because the class type is deduced from the member function pointer, which then becomes a lambda with first argument this deduced type. For a base class implementation, the deduced type is `Base`, not `Derived`, and so we generate and registered an overload which takes a `Base *` as first argument. Trying to call this fails if `Base` isn't registered (e.g. because it's an implementation detail class that isn't intended to be exposed to Python) because the type caster for an unregistered type always fails. This commit adds a `method_adaptor` function that rebinds a member function to a derived type member function and otherwise (i.e. regular functions/lambda) leaves the argument as-is. This is now used for class definitions so that they are bound with type being registered rather than a potential base type. A closely related fix in this commit is to similarly update the lambdas used for `def_readwrite` (and related) to bind to the class type being registered rather than the deduced type so that registering a property that resolves to a base class member similarly generates a usable function. Fixes #854, #910. Co-Authored-By:Dean Moldovan <dean0x7d@gmail.com>
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- 02 Jul, 2017 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
When casting to an unsigned type from a python 2 `int`, we currently cast using `(unsigned long long) PyLong_AsUnsignedLong(src.ptr())`. If the Python cast fails, it returns (unsigned long) -1, but then we cast this to `unsigned long long`, which means we get 4294967295, but because that isn't equal to `(unsigned long long) -1`, we don't detect the failure. This commit moves the unsigned casting into a `detail::as_unsigned` function which, upon error, casts -1 to the final type, and otherwise casts the return value to the final type to avoid the problematic double cast when an error occurs. The error most commonly shows up wherever `long` is 32-bits (e.g. under both 32- and 64-bit Windows, and under 32-bit linux) when passing a negative value to a bound function taking an `unsigned long`. Fixes #929. The added tests also trigger a latent segfault under PyPy: when casting to an integer smaller than `long` (e.g. casting to a `uint32_t` on a 64-bit `long` architecture) we check both for a Python error and also that the resulting intermediate value will fit in the final type. If there is no conversion error, but we get a value that would overflow, we end up calling `PyErr_ExceptionMatches()` illegally: that call is only allowed when there is a current exception. Under PyPy, this segfaults the test suite. It doesn't appear to segfault under CPython, but the documentation suggests that it *could* do so. The fix is to only check for the exception match if we actually got an error.
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- 29 Jun, 2017 2 commits
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Dean Moldovan authored
Put the caster's temporary array on life support to ensure correct lifetime when it's being used as a subcaster.
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Dean Moldovan authored
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- 27 Jun, 2017 5 commits
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Andreas Bergmeier authored
`nullptr` is not expected to work in this case.
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Dean Moldovan authored
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Dean Moldovan authored
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Dean Moldovan authored
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Dean Moldovan authored
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- 24 Jun, 2017 4 commits
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Dean Moldovan authored
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Bruce Merry authored
This fixes #856. Instead of the weakref trick, the internals structure holds an unordered_map from PyObject* to a vector of references. To avoid the cost of the unordered_map lookup for objects that don't have any keep_alive patients, a flag is added to each instance to indicate whether there is anything to do.
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Dean Moldovan authored
Fixes a race condition when multiple threads try to acquire the GIL before `detail::internals` have been initialized. `gil_scoped_release` is now tasked with initializing `internals` (guaranteed single-threaded) to ensure the safety of subsequent `acquire` calls from multiple threads.
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Jason Rhinelander authored
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- 15 Jun, 2017 1 commit
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Philip Austin authored
This allows named capsules to be constructed with `py::capsule`.
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- 12 Jun, 2017 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This commit allows multiple inheritance of pybind11 classes from Python, e.g. class MyType(Base1, Base2): def __init__(self): Base1.__init__(self) Base2.__init__(self) where Base1 and Base2 are pybind11-exported classes. This requires collapsing the various builtin base objects (pybind11_object_56, ...) introduced in 2.1 into a single pybind11_object of a fixed size; this fixed size object allocates enough space to contain either a simple object (one base class & small* holder instance), or a pointer to a new allocation that can contain an arbitrary number of base classes and holders, with holder size unrestricted. * "small" here means having a sizeof() of at most 2 pointers, which is enough to fit unique_ptr (sizeof is 1 ptr) and shared_ptr (sizeof is 2 ptrs). To minimize the performance impact, this repurposes `internals::registered_types_py` to store a vector of pybind-registered base types. For direct-use pybind types (e.g. the `PyA` for a C++ `A`) this is simply storing the same thing as before, but now in a vector; for Python-side inherited types, the map lets us avoid having to do a base class traversal as long as we've seen the class before. The change to vector is needed for multiple inheritance: Python types inheriting from multiple registered bases have one entry per base.
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- 10 Jun, 2017 3 commits
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Dean Moldovan authored
Fixes #896. From Python docs: "Once an iterator’s `__next__()` method raises `StopIteration`, it must continue to do so on subsequent calls. Implementations that do not obey this property are deemed broken."
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Dean Moldovan authored
pytest raises an error if it recurses into these directories.
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Ben Frederickson authored
Passing utf8 encoded strings from python to a C++ function taking a std::string was broken. The previous version was trying to call 'PyUnicode_FromObject' on this data, which failed to convert the string to unicode with the default ascii codec. Also this incurs an unnecessary conversion to unicode for data this is immediately converted back to utf8. Fix by treating python 2 strings the same python 3 bytes objects, and just copying over the data if possible.
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- 08 Jun, 2017 2 commits
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Dean Moldovan authored
MSVC 2015 Update 3 and 2017 can handle enough expression SFINAE to make this work now.
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Jason Rhinelander authored
Py_Finalize could potentially invoke code that calls `get_internals()`, which could create a new internals object if one didn't exist. `finalize_interpreter()` didn't catch this because it only used the pre-finalize interpreter pointer status; if this happens, it results in the internals pointer not being properly destroyed with the interpreter, which leaks, and also causes a `get_internals()` under a future interpreter to return an internals object that is wrong in various ways.
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- 07 Jun, 2017 1 commit
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Dean Moldovan authored
Fixes #887.
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- 30 May, 2017 3 commits
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This reimplements the std::reference_wrapper<T> caster to be a shell around the underlying T caster (rather than assuming T is a generic type), which lets it work for things like `std::reference_wrapper<int>` or anything else custom type caster with a lvalue cast operator. This also makes it properly fail when None is provided, just as an ordinary lvalue reference argument would similarly fail. This also adds a static assert to test that T has an appropriate type caster. It triggers for casters like `std::pair`, which have return-by-value cast operators. (In theory this could be supported by storing a local temporary for such types, but that's beyond the scope of this PR). This also replaces `automatic` or `take_ownership` return value policies with `automatic_reference` as taking ownership of a reference inside a reference_wrapper is not valid.
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Jason Rhinelander authored
test_issues is deprecated, and the following commit adds other, related reference_wrapper tests.
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Dean Moldovan authored
The new version of pytest now reports Python warnings by default. This commit filters out some third-party extension warnings which are not useful for pybind11 tests.
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- 29 May, 2017 3 commits
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Dean Moldovan authored
This commit also adds `doc()` to `object_api` as a shortcut for the `attr("__doc__")` accessor. The module macro changes from: ```c++ PYBIND11_PLUGIN(example) { pybind11::module m("example", "pybind11 example plugin"); m.def("add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; }); return m.ptr(); } ``` to: ```c++ PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) { m.doc() = "pybind11 example plugin"; m.def("add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; }); } ``` Using the old macro results in a deprecation warning. The warning actually points to the `pybind11_init` function (since attributes don't bind to macros), but the message should be quite clear: "PYBIND11_PLUGIN is deprecated, use PYBIND11_MODULE". -
Yannick Jadoul authored
* Added template constructors to buffer_info that can deduce the item size, format string, and number of dimensions from the pointer type and the shape container * Implemented actual buffer_info constructor as private delegate constructor taking rvalue reference as a workaround for the evaluation order move problem on GCC 4.8
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Dean Moldovan authored
Fixes #878.
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- 28 May, 2017 4 commits
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Dean Moldovan authored
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Dean Moldovan authored
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Dean Moldovan authored
At this point, there is only a single test for interpreter basics. Apart from embedding itself, having a C++ test framework will also benefit the C++-side features by allowing them to be tested directly.
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Dean Moldovan authored
All targets provided by pybind11: * pybind11::module - the existing target for creating extension modules * pybind11::embed - new target for embedding the interpreter * pybind11::pybind11 - common "base" target (headers only)
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- 27 May, 2017 1 commit
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Bruce Merry authored
Now that #851 has removed all multiple uses of a caster, it can just use the default-constructed value with needing a reset. This fixes two issues: 1. With std::experimental::optional (at least under GCC 5.4), the `= {}` would construct an instance of the optional type and then move-assign it, which fails if the value type isn't move-assignable. 2. With older versions of Boost, the `= {}` could fail because it is ambiguous, allowing construction of either `boost::none` or the value type.
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- 25 May, 2017 3 commits
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Bruce Merry authored
The stl_bind.h wrapper for `Vector.insert` neglected to do a bounds check.
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Jason Rhinelander authored
MSVC by default uses the local codepage, which fails when it sees the utf-8 in test_python_types.cpp. This adds the /utf-8 flag to the test suite compilation to force it to interpret source code as utf-8. Fixes #869
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This extends py::vectorize to automatically pass through non-vectorizable arguments. This removes the need for the documented "explicitly exclude an argument" workaround. Vectorization now applies to arithmetic, std::complex, and POD types, passed as plain value or by const lvalue reference (previously only pass-by-value types were supported). Non-const lvalue references and any other types are passed through as-is. Functions with rvalue reference arguments (whether vectorizable or not) are explicitly prohibited: an rvalue reference is inherently not something that can be passed multiple times and is thus unsuitable to being in a vectorized function. The vectorize returned value is also now more sensitive to inputs: previously it would return by value when all inputs are of size 1; this is now amended to having all inputs of size 1 *and* 0 dimensions. Thus if you pass in, for example, [[1]], you get back a 1x1, 2D array, while previously you got back just the resulting single value. Vectorization of member function specializations is now also supported via `py::vectorize(&Class::method)`; this required passthrough support for the initial object pointer on the wrapping function pointer.
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