"""distutils.unixccompiler Contains the UnixCCompiler class, a subclass of CCompiler that handles the "typical" Unix-style command-line C compiler: * macros defined with -Dname[=value] * macros undefined with -Uname * include search directories specified with -Idir * libraries specified with -lllib * library search directories specified with -Ldir * compile handled by 'cc' (or similar) executable with -c option: compiles .c to .o * link static library handled by 'ar' command (possibly with 'ranlib') * link shared library handled by 'cc -shared' """ # created 1999/07/05, Greg Ward __rcsid__ = "$Id$" import string, re, os from types import * from copy import copy from sysconfig import \ CC, CCSHARED, CFLAGS, OPT, LDSHARED, LDFLAGS, RANLIB, AR, SO from ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_preprocess_options, gen_lib_options from util import move_file, newer_pairwise, newer_group # XXX Things not currently handled: # * optimization/debug/warning flags; we just use whatever's in Python's # Makefile and live with it. Is this adequate? If not, we might # have to have a bunch of subclasses GNUCCompiler, SGICCompiler, # SunCCompiler, and I suspect down that road lies madness. # * even if we don't know a warning flag from an optimization flag, # we need some way for outsiders to feed preprocessor/compiler/linker # flags in to us -- eg. a sysadmin might want to mandate certain flags # via a site config file, or a user might want to set something for # compiling this module distribution only via the setup.py command # line, whatever. As long as these options come from something on the # current system, they can be as system-dependent as they like, and we # should just happily stuff them into the preprocessor/compiler/linker # options and carry on. class UnixCCompiler (CCompiler): # XXX perhaps there should really be *three* kinds of include # directories: those built in to the preprocessor, those from Python's # Makefiles, and those supplied to {add,set}_include_dirs(). Currently # we make no distinction between the latter two at this point; it's all # up to the client class to select the include directories to use above # and beyond the compiler's defaults. That is, both the Python include # directories and any module- or package-specific include directories # are specified via {add,set}_include_dirs(), and there's no way to # distinguish them. This might be a bug. compiler_type = 'unix' _obj_ext = '.o' _exe_ext = '' _shared_lib_ext = SO _static_lib_ext = '.a' def __init__ (self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) self.preprocess_options = None self.compile_options = None # Munge CC and OPT together in case there are flags stuck in CC. # Note that using these variables from sysconfig immediately makes # this module specific to building Python extensions and # inappropriate as a general-purpose C compiler front-end. So sue # me. Note also that we use OPT rather than CFLAGS, because CFLAGS # is the flags used to compile Python itself -- not only are there # -I options in there, they are the *wrong* -I options. We'll # leave selection of include directories up to the class using # UnixCCompiler! (self.cc, self.ccflags) = \ _split_command (CC + ' ' + OPT) self.ccflags_shared = string.split (CCSHARED) (self.ld_shared, self.ldflags_shared) = \ _split_command (LDSHARED) def compile (self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None): if output_dir is None: output_dir = self.output_dir if macros is None: macros = [] if include_dirs is None: include_dirs = [] if type (macros) is not ListType: raise TypeError, \ "'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples" if type (include_dirs) not in (ListType, TupleType): raise TypeError, \ "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings" include_dirs = list (include_dirs) pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options (self.macros + macros, self.include_dirs + include_dirs) # So we can mangle 'sources' without hurting the caller's data orig_sources = sources sources = copy (sources) # Get the list of expected output (object) files and drop files we # don't have to recompile. (Simplistic check -- we just compare the # source and object file, no deep dependency checking involving # header files. Hmmm.) objects = self.object_filenames (sources, output_dir) if not self.force: skipped = newer_pairwise (sources, objects) for skipped_pair in skipped: self.announce ("skipping %s (%s up-to-date)" % skipped_pair) # If anything left to compile, compile it if sources: # XXX use of ccflags_shared means we're blithely assuming # that we're compiling for inclusion in a shared object! # (will have to fix this when I add the ability to build a # new Python) cc_args = ['-c'] + pp_opts + \ self.ccflags + self.ccflags_shared + \ sources if extra_preargs: cc_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: cc_args.extend (extra_postargs) self.spawn ([self.cc] + cc_args) # Note that compiling multiple source files in the same go like # we've just done drops the .o file in the current directory, which # may not be what the caller wants (depending on the 'output_dir' # parameter). So, if necessary, fix that now by moving the .o # files into the desired output directory. (The alternative, of # course, is to compile one-at-a-time with a -o option. 6 of one, # 12/2 of the other...) if output_dir: for i in range (len (objects)): src = os.path.basename (objects[i]) objects[i] = self.move_file (src, output_dir) # Have to re-fetch list of object filenames, because we want to # return *all* of them, including those that weren't recompiled on # this call! return self.object_filenames (orig_sources, output_dir) # XXX punting on 'link_static_lib()' for now -- it might be better for # CCompiler to mandate just 'link_binary()' or some such to build a new # Python binary; it would then take care of linking in everything # needed for the new Python without messing with an intermediate static # library. def link_shared_lib (self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None): # XXX should we sanity check the library name? (eg. no # slashes) self.link_shared_object ( objects, "lib%s%s" % (output_libname, self._shared_lib_ext), output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, extra_preargs, extra_postargs) def link_shared_object (self, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None): if output_dir is None: output_dir = self.output_dir if libraries is None: libraries = [] if library_dirs is None: library_dirs = [] if type (libraries) not in (ListType, TupleType): raise TypeError, \ "'libraries' (if supplied) must be a list of strings" if type (library_dirs) not in (ListType, TupleType): raise TypeError, \ "'library_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings" libraries = list (libraries) library_dirs = list (library_dirs) lib_opts = gen_lib_options (self, self.library_dirs + library_dirs, self.libraries + libraries) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join (output_dir, output_filename) # If any of the input object files are newer than the output shared # object, relink. Again, this is a simplistic dependency check: # doesn't look at any of the libraries we might be linking with. # Note that we have to dance around errors comparing timestamps if # we're in dry-run mode (yuck). if not self.force: try: newer = newer_group (objects, output_filename) except OSError: if self.dry_run: newer = 1 else: raise if self.force or newer: ld_args = self.ldflags_shared + objects + \ lib_opts + ['-o', output_filename] if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend (extra_postargs) self.spawn ([self.ld_shared] + ld_args) else: self.announce ("skipping %s (up-to-date)" % output_filename) # link_shared_object () # -- Filename-mangling (etc.) methods ------------------------------ def object_filenames (self, source_filenames, output_dir=None): outnames = [] for inname in source_filenames: outname = re.sub (r'\.(c|C|cc|cxx|cpp)$', self._obj_ext, inname) outname = os.path.basename (outname) if output_dir is not None: outname = os.path.join (output_dir, outname) outnames.append (outname) return outnames def shared_object_filename (self, source_filename, output_dir=None): outname = re.sub (r'\.(c|C|cc|cxx|cpp)$', self._shared_lib_ext) outname = os.path.basename (outname) if output_dir is not None: outname = os.path.join (output_dir, outname) return outname def library_filename (self, libname): return "lib%s%s" % (libname, self._static_lib_ext) def shared_library_filename (self, libname): return "lib%s%s" % (libname, self._shared_lib_ext) def library_dir_option (self, dir): return "-L" + dir def library_option (self, lib): return "-l" + lib def find_library_file (self, dirs, lib): for dir in dirs: shared = os.path.join (dir, self.shared_library_filename (lib)) static = os.path.join (dir, self.library_filename (lib)) # We're second-guessing the linker here, with not much hard # data to go on: GCC seems to prefer the shared library, so I'm # assuming that *all* Unix C compilers do. And of course I'm # ignoring even GCC's "-static" option. So sue me. if os.path.exists (shared): return shared elif os.path.exists (static): return static else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None # find_library_file () # class UnixCCompiler def _split_command (cmd): """Split a command string up into the progam to run (a string) and the list of arguments; return them as (cmd, arglist).""" args = string.split (cmd) return (args[0], args[1:])