Capsules¶
Refer to Providing a C API for an Extension Module for more information on using these objects.
New in version 2.7.
-
PyCapsule
¶ This subtype of
PyObject
represents an opaque value, useful for C extension modules who need to pass an opaque value (as avoid*
pointer) through Python code to other C code. It is often used to make a C function pointer defined in one module available to other modules, so the regular import mechanism can be used to access C APIs defined in dynamically loaded modules.
-
PyCapsule_Destructor
¶ The type of a destructor callback for a capsule. Defined as:
typedef void (*PyCapsule_Destructor)(PyObject *);
See
PyCapsule_New()
for the semantics of PyCapsule_Destructor callbacks.
-
PyObject*
PyCapsule_New
(void *pointer, const char *name, PyCapsule_Destructor destructor)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Create a
PyCapsule
encapsulating the pointer. The pointer argument may not be NULL.On failure, set an exception and return NULL.
The name string may either be NULL or a pointer to a valid C string. If non-NULL, this string must outlive the capsule. (Though it is permitted to free it inside the destructor.)
If the destructor argument is not NULL, it will be called with the capsule as its argument when it is destroyed.
If this capsule will be stored as an attribute of a module, the name should be specified as
modulename.attributename
. This will enable other modules to import the capsule usingPyCapsule_Import()
.
-
void*
PyCapsule_GetPointer
(PyObject *capsule, const char *name)¶ Retrieve the pointer stored in the capsule. On failure, set an exception and return NULL.
The name parameter must compare exactly to the name stored in the capsule. If the name stored in the capsule is NULL, the name passed in must also be NULL. Python uses the C function
strcmp()
to compare capsule names.
-
PyCapsule_Destructor
PyCapsule_GetDestructor
(PyObject *capsule)¶ Return the current destructor stored in the capsule. On failure, set an exception and return NULL.
It is legal for a capsule to have a NULL destructor. This makes a NULL return code somewhat ambiguous; use
PyCapsule_IsValid()
orPyErr_Occurred()
to disambiguate.
-
void*
PyCapsule_GetContext
(PyObject *capsule)¶ Return the current context stored in the capsule. On failure, set an exception and return NULL.
It is legal for a capsule to have a NULL context. This makes a NULL return code somewhat ambiguous; use
PyCapsule_IsValid()
orPyErr_Occurred()
to disambiguate.
-
const char*
PyCapsule_GetName
(PyObject *capsule)¶ Return the current name stored in the capsule. On failure, set an exception and return NULL.
It is legal for a capsule to have a NULL name. This makes a NULL return code somewhat ambiguous; use
PyCapsule_IsValid()
orPyErr_Occurred()
to disambiguate.
-
void*
PyCapsule_Import
(const char *name, int no_block)¶ Import a pointer to a C object from a capsule attribute in a module. The name parameter should specify the full name to the attribute, as in
module.attribute
. The name stored in the capsule must match this string exactly. If no_block is true, import the module without blocking (usingPyImport_ImportModuleNoBlock()
). If no_block is false, import the module conventionally (usingPyImport_ImportModule()
).Return the capsule’s internal pointer on success. On failure, set an exception and return NULL.
-
int
PyCapsule_IsValid
(PyObject *capsule, const char *name)¶ Determines whether or not capsule is a valid capsule. A valid capsule is non-NULL, passes
PyCapsule_CheckExact()
, has a non-NULL pointer stored in it, and its internal name matches the name parameter. (SeePyCapsule_GetPointer()
for information on how capsule names are compared.)In other words, if
PyCapsule_IsValid()
returns a true value, calls to any of the accessors (any function starting withPyCapsule_Get()
) are guaranteed to succeed.Return a nonzero value if the object is valid and matches the name passed in. Return
0
otherwise. This function will not fail.
-
int
PyCapsule_SetContext
(PyObject *capsule, void *context)¶ Set the context pointer inside capsule to context.
Return
0
on success. Return nonzero and set an exception on failure.
-
int
PyCapsule_SetDestructor
(PyObject *capsule, PyCapsule_Destructor destructor)¶ Set the destructor inside capsule to destructor.
Return
0
on success. Return nonzero and set an exception on failure.
-
int
PyCapsule_SetName
(PyObject *capsule, const char *name)¶ Set the name inside capsule to name. If non-NULL, the name must outlive the capsule. If the previous name stored in the capsule was not NULL, no attempt is made to free it.
Return
0
on success. Return nonzero and set an exception on failure.