aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py
blob: c5c86d8f074c02bc4323adcfd7fce960fd3e90ee (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
"""distutils.cygwinccompiler

Provides the CygwinCCompiler class, a subclass of UnixCCompiler that
handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows.  It also contains
the Mingw32CCompiler class which handles the mingw32 port of GCC (same as
cygwin in no-cygwin mode).
"""

# problems:
#
# * if you use a msvc compiled python version (1.5.2)
#   1. you have to insert a __GNUC__ section in its config.h
#   2. you have to generate an import library for its dll
#      - create a def-file for python??.dll
#      - create an import library using
#             dlltool --dllname python15.dll --def python15.def \
#                       --output-lib libpython15.a
#
#   see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html
#
# * We put export_symbols in a def-file, and don't use
#   --export-all-symbols because it doesn't worked reliable in some
#   tested configurations. And because other windows compilers also
#   need their symbols specified this no serious problem.
#
# tested configurations:
#
# * cygwin gcc 2.91.57/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works
#   (after patching python's config.h and for C++ some other include files)
#   see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html
# * mingw32 gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works
#   (ld doesn't support -shared, so we use dllwrap)
# * cygwin gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.10.90/dllwrap 2.10.90 works now
#   - its dllwrap doesn't work, there is a bug in binutils 2.10.90
#     see also http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/2000-06/msg01274.html
#   - using gcc -mdll instead dllwrap doesn't work without -static because
#     it tries to link against dlls instead their import libraries. (If
#     it finds the dll first.)
#     By specifying -static we force ld to link against the import libraries,
#     this is windows standard and there are normally not the necessary symbols
#     in the dlls.
#   *** only the version of June 2000 shows these problems
# * cygwin gcc 3.2/ld 2.13.90 works
#   (ld supports -shared)
# * mingw gcc 3.2/ld 2.13 works
#   (ld supports -shared)
# * llvm-mingw with Clang 11 works
#   (lld supports -shared)

import os
import sys
import copy
import shlex
import warnings
from subprocess import check_output

from distutils.unixccompiler import UnixCCompiler
from distutils.file_util import write_file
from distutils.errors import (DistutilsExecError, CCompilerError,
        CompileError, UnknownFileError)
from distutils.version import LooseVersion, suppress_known_deprecation

def get_msvcr():
    """Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built
    with MSVC 7.0 or later.
    """
    msc_pos = sys.version.find('MSC v.')
    if msc_pos != -1:
        msc_ver = sys.version[msc_pos+6:msc_pos+10]
        if msc_ver == '1300':
            # MSVC 7.0
            return ['msvcr70']
        elif msc_ver == '1310':
            # MSVC 7.1
            return ['msvcr71']
        elif msc_ver == '1400':
            # VS2005 / MSVC 8.0
            return ['msvcr80']
        elif msc_ver == '1500':
            # VS2008 / MSVC 9.0
            return ['msvcr90']
        elif msc_ver == '1600':
            # VS2010 / MSVC 10.0
            return ['msvcr100']
        elif msc_ver == '1700':
            # VS2012 / MSVC 11.0
            return ['msvcr110']
        elif msc_ver == '1800':
            # VS2013 / MSVC 12.0
            return ['msvcr120']
        elif 1900 <= int(msc_ver) < 2000:
            # VS2015 / MSVC 14.0
           return ['ucrt', 'vcruntime140'] 
        else:
            raise ValueError("Unknown MS Compiler version %s " % msc_ver)


class CygwinCCompiler(UnixCCompiler):
    """ Handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows.
    """
    compiler_type = 'cygwin'
    obj_extension = ".o"
    static_lib_extension = ".a"
    shared_lib_extension = ".dll"
    static_lib_format = "lib%s%s"
    shared_lib_format = "%s%s"
    exe_extension = ".exe"

    def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):

        super().__init__(verbose, dry_run, force)

        status, details = check_config_h()
        self.debug_print("Python's GCC status: %s (details: %s)" %
                         (status, details))
        if status is not CONFIG_H_OK:
            self.warn(
                "Python's pyconfig.h doesn't seem to support your compiler. "
                "Reason: %s. "
                "Compiling may fail because of undefined preprocessor macros."
                % details)

        self.cc = os.environ.get('CC', 'gcc')
        self.cxx = os.environ.get('CXX', 'g++')

        self.linker_dll = self.cc
        shared_option = "-shared"

        self.set_executables(compiler='%s -mcygwin -O -Wall' % self.cc,
                             compiler_so='%s -mcygwin -mdll -O -Wall' % self.cc,
                             compiler_cxx='%s -mcygwin -O -Wall' % self.cxx,
                             linker_exe='%s -mcygwin' % self.cc,
                             linker_so=('%s -mcygwin %s' %
                                        (self.linker_dll, shared_option)))

        # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built
        # with MSVC 7.0 or later.
        self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr()

    @property
    def gcc_version(self):
        # Older numpy dependend on this existing to check for ancient
        # gcc versions. This doesn't make much sense with clang etc so
        # just hardcode to something recent.
        # https://github.com/numpy/numpy/pull/20333
        warnings.warn(
            "gcc_version attribute of CygwinCCompiler is deprecated. "
            "Instead of returning actual gcc version a fixed value 11.2.0 is returned.",
            DeprecationWarning,
            stacklevel=2,
        )
        with suppress_known_deprecation():
            return LooseVersion("11.2.0")

    def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts):
        """Compiles the source by spawning GCC and windres if needed."""
        if ext == '.rc' or ext == '.res':
            # gcc needs '.res' and '.rc' compiled to object files !!!
            try:
                self.spawn(["windres", "-i", src, "-o", obj])
            except DistutilsExecError as msg:
                raise CompileError(msg)
        else: # for other files use the C-compiler
            try:
                self.spawn(self.compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] +
                           extra_postargs)
            except DistutilsExecError as msg:
                raise CompileError(msg)

    def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None,
             libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None,
             export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None,
             extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None):
        """Link the objects."""
        # use separate copies, so we can modify the lists
        extra_preargs = copy.copy(extra_preargs or [])
        libraries = copy.copy(libraries or [])
        objects = copy.copy(objects or [])

        # Additional libraries
        libraries.extend(self.dll_libraries)

        # handle export symbols by creating a def-file
        # with executables this only works with gcc/ld as linker
        if ((export_symbols is not None) and
            (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")):
            # (The linker doesn't do anything if output is up-to-date.
            # So it would probably better to check if we really need this,
            # but for this we had to insert some unchanged parts of
            # UnixCCompiler, and this is not what we want.)

            # we want to put some files in the same directory as the
            # object files are, build_temp doesn't help much
            # where are the object files
            temp_dir = os.path.dirname(objects[0])
            # name of dll to give the helper files the same base name
            (dll_name, dll_extension) = os.path.splitext(
                os.path.basename(output_filename))

            # generate the filenames for these files
            def_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, dll_name + ".def")
            lib_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, 'lib' + dll_name + ".a")

            # Generate .def file
            contents = [
                "LIBRARY %s" % os.path.basename(output_filename),
                "EXPORTS"]
            for sym in export_symbols:
                contents.append(sym)
            self.execute(write_file, (def_file, contents),
                         "writing %s" % def_file)

            # next add options for def-file and to creating import libraries

            # doesn't work: bfd_close build\...\libfoo.a: Invalid operation
            #extra_preargs.extend(["-Wl,--out-implib,%s" % lib_file])
            # for gcc/ld the def-file is specified as any object files
            objects.append(def_file)

        #end: if ((export_symbols is not None) and
        #        (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")):

        # who wants symbols and a many times larger output file
        # should explicitly switch the debug mode on
        # otherwise we let ld strip the output file
        # (On my machine: 10KiB < stripped_file < ??100KiB
        #   unstripped_file = stripped_file + XXX KiB
        #  ( XXX=254 for a typical python extension))
        if not debug:
            extra_preargs.append("-s")

        UnixCCompiler.link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename,
                           output_dir, libraries, library_dirs,
                           runtime_library_dirs,
                           None, # export_symbols, we do this in our def-file
                           debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp,
                           target_lang)

    # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------

    def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
        """Adds supports for rc and res files."""
        if output_dir is None:
            output_dir = ''
        obj_names = []
        for src_name in source_filenames:
            # use normcase to make sure '.rc' is really '.rc' and not '.RC'
            base, ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(src_name))
            if ext not in (self.src_extensions + ['.rc','.res']):
                raise UnknownFileError("unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % \
                      (ext, src_name))
            if strip_dir:
                base = os.path.basename (base)
            if ext in ('.res', '.rc'):
                # these need to be compiled to object files
                obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir,
                                              base + ext + self.obj_extension))
            else:
                obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir,
                                               base + self.obj_extension))
        return obj_names

# the same as cygwin plus some additional parameters
class Mingw32CCompiler(CygwinCCompiler):
    """ Handles the Mingw32 port of the GNU C compiler to Windows.
    """
    compiler_type = 'mingw32'

    def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):

        super().__init__ (verbose, dry_run, force)

        shared_option = "-shared"

        if is_cygwincc(self.cc):
            raise CCompilerError(
                'Cygwin gcc cannot be used with --compiler=mingw32')

        self.set_executables(compiler='%s -O -Wall' % self.cc,
                             compiler_so='%s -mdll -O -Wall' % self.cc,
                             compiler_cxx='%s -O -Wall' % self.cxx,
                             linker_exe='%s' % self.cc,
                             linker_so='%s %s'
                                        % (self.linker_dll, shared_option))

        # Maybe we should also append -mthreads, but then the finished
        # dlls need another dll (mingwm10.dll see Mingw32 docs)
        # (-mthreads: Support thread-safe exception handling on `Mingw32')

        # no additional libraries needed
        self.dll_libraries=[]

        # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built
        # with MSVC 7.0 or later.
        self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr()

# Because these compilers aren't configured in Python's pyconfig.h file by
# default, we should at least warn the user if he is using an unmodified
# version.

CONFIG_H_OK = "ok"
CONFIG_H_NOTOK = "not ok"
CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN = "uncertain"

def check_config_h():
    """Check if the current Python installation appears amenable to building
    extensions with GCC.

    Returns a tuple (status, details), where 'status' is one of the following
    constants:

    - CONFIG_H_OK: all is well, go ahead and compile
    - CONFIG_H_NOTOK: doesn't look good
    - CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN: not sure -- unable to read pyconfig.h

    'details' is a human-readable string explaining the situation.

    Note there are two ways to conclude "OK": either 'sys.version' contains
    the string "GCC" (implying that this Python was built with GCC), or the
    installed "pyconfig.h" contains the string "__GNUC__".
    """

    # XXX since this function also checks sys.version, it's not strictly a
    # "pyconfig.h" check -- should probably be renamed...

    from distutils import sysconfig

    # if sys.version contains GCC then python was compiled with GCC, and the
    # pyconfig.h file should be OK
    if "GCC" in sys.version:
        return CONFIG_H_OK, "sys.version mentions 'GCC'"

    # Clang would also work
    if "Clang" in sys.version:
        return CONFIG_H_OK, "sys.version mentions 'Clang'"

    # let's see if __GNUC__ is mentioned in python.h
    fn = sysconfig.get_config_h_filename()
    try:
        config_h = open(fn)
        try:
            if "__GNUC__" in config_h.read():
                return CONFIG_H_OK, "'%s' mentions '__GNUC__'" % fn
            else:
                return CONFIG_H_NOTOK, "'%s' does not mention '__GNUC__'" % fn
        finally:
            config_h.close()
    except OSError as exc:
        return (CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN,
                "couldn't read '%s': %s" % (fn, exc.strerror))

def is_cygwincc(cc):
    '''Try to determine if the compiler that would be used is from cygwin.'''
    out_string = check_output(shlex.split(cc) + ['-dumpmachine'])
    return out_string.strip().endswith(b'cygwin')


get_versions = None
"""
A stand-in for the previous get_versions() function to prevent failures
when monkeypatched. See pypa/setuptools#2969.
"""