What I believe you're aiming to do is pass a callable Python object to something accepting a std::function
. You need to do create a bit of C++ code to make it happen, but it's reasonably straightforward.
Starting by defining "accepts_std_function.hpp" as simply as possible to provide an illustrative example:
#include <functional>
#include <string>
inline void call_some_std_func(std::function<void(int,const std::string&)> callback) {
callback(5,std::string("hello"));
}
The trick is then to create a wrapper class that holds a PyObject*
and defines operator()
. Defining operator()
allows it to be converted to a std::function
. Most of the class is just refcounting. "py_obj_wrapper.hpp":
#include <Python.h>
#include <string>
#include "call_obj.h" // cython helper file
class PyObjWrapper {
public:
// constructors and destructors mostly do reference counting
PyObjWrapper(PyObject* o): held(o) {
Py_XINCREF(o);
}
PyObjWrapper(const PyObjWrapper& rhs): PyObjWrapper(rhs.held) { // C++11 onwards only
}
PyObjWrapper(PyObjWrapper&& rhs): held(rhs.held) {
rhs.held = 0;
}
// need no-arg constructor to stack allocate in Cython
PyObjWrapper(): PyObjWrapper(nullptr) {
}
~PyObjWrapper() {
Py_XDECREF(held);
}
PyObjWrapper& operator=(const PyObjWrapper& rhs) {
PyObjWrapper tmp = rhs;
return (*this = std::move(tmp));
}
PyObjWrapper& operator=(PyObjWrapper&& rhs) {
held = rhs.held;
rhs.held = 0;
return *this;
}
void operator()(int a, const std::string& b) {
if (held) { // nullptr check
call_obj(held,a,b); // note, no way of checking for errors until you return to Python
}
}
private:
PyObject* held;
};
This file uses a very short Cython file to do the conversions from C++ types to Python types. "call_obj.pyx":
from libcpp.string cimport string
cdef public void call_obj(obj, int a, const string& b):
obj(a,b)
You then just need to create the Cython code wraps these types. Compile this module and call test_func
to run this. ("simple_version.pyx":)
cdef extern from "py_obj_wrapper.hpp":
cdef cppclass PyObjWrapper:
PyObjWrapper()
PyObjWrapper(object) # define a constructor that takes a Python object
# note - doesn't match c++ signature - that's fine!
cdef extern from "accepts_std_func.hpp":
void call_some_std_func(PyObjWrapper) except +
# here I lie about the signature
# because C++ does an automatic conversion to function pointer
# for classes that define operator(), but Cython doesn't know that
def example(a,b):
print(a,b)
def test_call():
cdef PyObjWrapper f = PyObjWrapper(example)
call_some_std_func(f)
The above version works but is somewhat limited in that if you want to do this with a different std::function
specialization you need to rewrite some of it (and the conversion from C++ to Python types doesn't naturally lend itself to a template implementation). One easy way round this is to use the Boost Python library object
class, which has a templated operator()
. This comes at the cost of introducing an extra library dependency.
First defining the header "boost_wrapper.hpp" to simplify the conversion from PyObject*
to boost::python::object
#include <boost/python/object.hpp>
inline boost::python::object get_as_bpo(PyObject* o) {
return boost::python::object(boost::python::handle<>(boost::python::borrowed(o)));
}
You then just need to Cython code to wrap this class ("boost_version.pyx"). Again, call test_func
cdef extern from "boost_wrapper.hpp":
cdef cppclass bpo "boost::python::object":
# manually set name (it'll conflict with "object" otherwise
bpo()
bpo get_as_bpo(object)
cdef extern from "accepts_std_func.hpp":
void call_some_std_func(bpo) except + # again, lie about signature
def example(a,b):
print(a,b)
def test_call():
cdef bpo f = get_as_bpo(example)
call_some_std_func(f)
A "setup.py"
from distutils.core import setup, Extension
from Cython.Build import cythonize
extensions = [
Extension(
"simple_version", # the extension name
sources=["simple_version.pyx", "call_obj.pyx" ],
language="c++", # generate and compile C++ code
),
Extension(
"boost_version", # the extension name
sources=["boost_version.pyx"],
libraries=['boost_python'],
language="c++", # generate and compile C++ code
)
]
setup(ext_modules = cythonize(extensions))
(A final option is to use ctypes
to generate a C function pointer from a Python callable. See Using function pointers to methods of classes without the gil (bottom half of answer) and http://osdir.com/ml/python-cython-devel/2009-10/msg00202.html. I'm not going to go into detail about this here.)