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What is the easiest way to make an optional C extension for a python package?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-22 21:19 出处:网络
I\'ve created a C extension that I\'d like to enable in my Python package (using setuptools) only if a command line option is passe开发者_Go百科d in.What is the easiest way to do this?

I've created a C extension that I'd like to enable in my Python package (using setuptools) only if a command line option is passe开发者_Go百科d in. What is the easiest way to do this?

I can't seem to find any straightforward ways of going about this.


There's actually a distribute/setuptools feature called "Features" that can be used for this. It's explicitly designed to have setup.py do different things based on --with-xxx and --without-xxx command line options.

  • This blog post gives a nice introduction, I can't find any better documentation at this time (besides the Distribute source - the Feature class and features keyword).
  • The jinja project's setup.py uses Features for your exact purpose, it might be a good template to work from.
  • The simplejson setup.py also does something similar, except that it's coded to always try to build the C-extension feature it defines, and fall back gracefully to pure-python when building fails; this may also be useful for your purpose.


ext_modules = []
if '--add-this' in sys.argv:
    ext_modules.append(Extension(...))
    sys.argv.remove('--add-this')
setup(...
      ext_modules = ext_modules
)

This is hacky, but might be easiest. A more advanced approach would be to extend the Distribution class to support a flag, say --with-modules and then customize ext_modules inside finalize_options.

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