23 KiB
Upgrade guide
This is a companion guide to the changelog
. While the changelog briefly lists all of the new features, improvements and bug fixes, this upgrade guide focuses only the subset which directly impacts your experience when upgrading to a new version. But it goes into more detail. This includes things like deprecated APIs and their replacements, build system changes, general code modernization and other useful information.
v2.9
- Any usage of the recently added
py::make_simple_namespace
should be converted to usingpy::module_::import("types").attr("SimpleNamespace")
instead. - The use of
_
in custom type casters can now be replaced with the more readableconst_name
instead. The old_
shortcut has been retained unless it is being used as a macro (like for gettext).
v2.7
Before v2.7, py::str
can hold PyUnicodeObject
or PyBytesObject
, and py::isinstance<str>()
is true
for both py::str
and py::bytes
. Starting with v2.7, py::str
exclusively holds PyUnicodeObject
(#2409), and py::isinstance<str>()
is true
only for py::str
. To help in the transition of user code, the PYBIND11_STR_LEGACY_PERMISSIVE
macro is provided as an escape hatch to go back to the legacy behavior. This macro will be removed in future releases. Two types of required fixes are expected to be common:
- Accidental use of
py::str
instead ofpy::bytes
, masked by the legacy behavior. These are probably very easy to fix, by changing frompy::str
topy::bytes
. - Reliance on py::isinstance<str>(obj) being
true
forpy::bytes
. This is likely to be easy to fix in most cases by adding|| py::isinstance<bytes>(obj)
, but a fix may be more involved, e.g. ifpy::isinstance<T>
appears in a template. Such situations will require careful review and custom fixes.
v2.6
Usage of the PYBIND11_OVERLOAD*
macros and get_overload
function should be replaced by PYBIND11_OVERRIDE*
and get_override
. In the future, the old macros may be deprecated and removed.
py::module
has been renamed py::module_
, but a backward compatible typedef has been included. This change was to avoid a language change in C++20 that requires unqualified module
not be placed at the start of a logical line. Qualified usage is unaffected and the typedef will remain unless the C++ language rules change again.
The public constructors of py::module_
have been deprecated. Use PYBIND11_MODULE
or module_::create_extension_module
instead.
An error is now thrown when __init__
is forgotten on subclasses. This was incorrect before, but was not checked. Add a call to __init__
if it is missing.
A py::type_error
is now thrown when casting to a subclass (like py::bytes
from py::object
) if the conversion is not valid. Make a valid conversion instead.
The undocumented h.get_type()
method has been deprecated and replaced by py::type::of(h)
.
Enums now have a __str__
method pre-defined; if you want to override it, the simplest fix is to add the new py::prepend()
tag when defining "__str__"
.
If __eq__
defined but not __hash__
, __hash__
is now set to None
, as in normal CPython. You should add __hash__
if you intended the class to be hashable, possibly using the new py::hash
shortcut.
The constructors for py::array
now always take signed integers for size, for consistency. This may lead to compiler warnings on some systems. Cast to py::ssize_t
instead of std::size_t
.
The tools/clang
submodule and tools/mkdoc.py
have been moved to a standalone package, pybind11-mkdoc. If you were using those tools, please use them via a pip install from the new location.
The pybind11
package on PyPI no longer fills the wheel "headers" slot - if you were using the headers from this slot, they are available by requesting the global
extra, that is, pip install "pybind11[global]"
. (Most users will be unaffected, as the pybind11/include
location is reported by python -m pybind11 --includes
and pybind11.get_include()
is still correct and has not changed since 2.5).
CMake support:
The minimum required version of CMake is now 3.4. Several details of the CMake support have been deprecated; warnings will be shown if you need to change something. The changes are:
PYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD=<platform-flag>
is deprecated, please useCMAKE_CXX_STANDARD=<number>
instead, or any other valid CMake CXX or CUDA standard selection method, liketarget_compile_features
.- If you do not request a standard, pybind11 targets will compile with the compiler default, but not less than C++11, instead of forcing C++14 always. If you depend on the old behavior, please use
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14 CACHE STRING "")
instead. - Direct
pybind11::module
usage should always be accompanied by at leastset(CMAKE_CXX_VISIBILITY_PRESET hidden)
or similar - it used to try to manually force this compiler flag (but not correctly on all compilers or with CUDA). pybind11_add_module
'sSYSTEM
argument is deprecated and does nothing; linking now behaves like other imported libraries consistently in both config and submodule mode, and behaves like aSYSTEM
library by default.- If
PYTHON_EXECUTABLE
is not set, virtual environments (venv
,virtualenv
, andconda
) are prioritized over the standard search (similar to the new FindPython mode).
In addition, the following changes may be of interest:
CMAKE_INTERPROCEDURAL_OPTIMIZATION
will be respected bypybind11_add_module
if set instead of linking topybind11::lto
orpybind11::thin_lto
.- Using
find_package(Python COMPONENTS Interpreter Development)
before pybind11 will cause pybind11 to use the new Python mechanisms instead of its own custom search, based on a patched version of classicFindPythonInterp
/FindPythonLibs
. In the future, this may become the default. A recent (3.15+ or 3.18.2+) version of CMake is recommended.
v2.5
The Python package now includes the headers as data in the package itself, as well as in the "headers" wheel slot. pybind11 --includes
and pybind11.get_include()
report the new location, which is always correct regardless of how pybind11 was installed, making the old user=
argument meaningless. If you are not using the function to get the location already, you are encouraged to switch to the package location.
v2.2
Deprecation of the PYBIND11_PLUGIN
macro
PYBIND11_MODULE
is now the preferred way to create module entry points. The old macro emits a compile-time deprecation warning.
// old
PYBIND11_PLUGIN(example) {module m("example", "documentation string");
py::
"add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; });
m.def(
return m.ptr();
}
// new
PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) {"documentation string"; // optional
m.doc() =
"add", [](int a, int b) { return a + b; });
m.def( }
New API for defining custom constructors and pickling functions
The old placement-new custom constructors have been deprecated. The new approach uses py::init()
and factory functions to greatly improve type safety.
Placement-new can be called accidentally with an incompatible type (without any compiler errors or warnings), or it can initialize the same object multiple times if not careful with the Python-side __init__
calls. The new-style custom constructors prevent such mistakes. See custom_constructors
for details.
// old -- deprecated (runtime warning shown only in debug mode)
class<Foo>(m, "Foo")
py::"__init__", [](Foo &self, ...) {
.def(new (&self) Foo(...); // uses placement-new
});
// new
class<Foo>(m, "Foo")
py::// Note: no `self` argument
.def(py::init([](...) { return new Foo(...); // return by raw pointer
// or: return std::make_unique<Foo>(...); // return by holder
// or: return Foo(...); // return by value (move constructor)
}));
Mirroring the custom constructor changes, py::pickle()
is now the preferred way to get and set object state. See pickling
for details.
// old -- deprecated (runtime warning shown only in debug mode)
class<Foo>(m, "Foo")
py::
..."__getstate__", [](const Foo &self) {
.def(return py::make_tuple(self.value1(), self.value2(), ...);
})"__setstate__", [](Foo &self, py::tuple t) {
.def(new (&self) Foo(t[0].cast<std::string>(), ...);
});
// new
class<Foo>(m, "Foo")
py::
...
.def(py::pickle(const Foo &self) { // __getstate__
[](return py::make_tuple(self.value1(), self.value2(), ...); // unchanged
},// __setstate__, note: no `self` argument
[](py::tuple t) { return new Foo(t[0].cast<std::string>(), ...);
// or: return std::make_unique<Foo>(...); // return by holder
// or: return Foo(...); // return by value (move constructor)
} ));
For both the constructors and pickling, warnings are shown at module initialization time (on import, not when the functions are called). They're only visible when compiled in debug mode. Sample warning:
pybind11-bound class 'mymodule.Foo' is using an old-style placement-new '__init__'
which has been deprecated. See the upgrade guide in pybind11's docs.
Stricter enforcement of hidden symbol visibility for pybind11 modules
pybind11 now tries to actively enforce hidden symbol visibility for modules. If you're using either one of pybind11's CMake or Python build systems
<compiling>
(the two example repositories) and you haven't been exporting any symbols, there's nothing to be concerned about. All the changes have been done transparently in the background. If you were building manually or relied on specific default visibility, read on.
Setting default symbol visibility to hidden has always been recommended for pybind11 (see faq:symhidden
). On Linux and macOS, hidden symbol visibility (in conjunction with the strip
utility) yields much smaller module binaries. CPython's extension docs also recommend hiding symbols by default, with the goal of avoiding symbol name clashes between modules. Starting with v2.2, pybind11 enforces this more strictly: (1) by declaring all symbols inside the pybind11
namespace as hidden and (2) by including the -fvisibility=hidden
flag on Linux and macOS (only for extension modules, not for embedding the interpreter).
The namespace-scope hidden visibility is done automatically in pybind11's headers and it's generally transparent to users. It ensures that:
- Modules compiled with different pybind11 versions don't clash with each other.
- Some new features, like
py::module_local
bindings, can work as intended.
The -fvisibility=hidden
flag applies the same visibility to user bindings outside of the pybind11
namespace. It's now set automatic by pybind11's CMake and Python build systems, but this needs to be done manually by users of other build systems. Adding this flag:
- Minimizes the chances of symbol conflicts between modules. E.g. if two unrelated modules were statically linked to different (ABI-incompatible) versions of the same third-party library, a symbol clash would be likely (and would end with unpredictable results).
- Produces smaller binaries on Linux and macOS, as pointed out previously.
Within pybind11's CMake build system, pybind11_add_module
has always been setting the -fvisibility=hidden
flag in release mode. From now on, it's being applied unconditionally, even in debug mode and it can no longer be opted out of with the NO_EXTRAS
option. The pybind11::module
target now also adds this flag to its interface. The pybind11::embed
target is unchanged.
The most significant change here is for the pybind11::module
target. If you were previously relying on default visibility, i.e. if your Python module was doubling as a shared library with dependents, you'll need to either export symbols manually (recommended for cross-platform libraries) or factor out the shared library (and have the Python module link to it like the other dependents). As a temporary workaround, you can also restore default visibility using the CMake code below, but this is not recommended in the long run:
target_link_libraries(mymodule PRIVATE pybind11::module)
add_library(restore_default_visibility INTERFACE)
target_compile_options(restore_default_visibility INTERFACE -fvisibility=default)
target_link_libraries(mymodule PRIVATE restore_default_visibility)
Local STL container bindings
Previous pybind11 versions could only bind types globally -- all pybind11 modules, even unrelated ones, would have access to the same exported types. However, this would also result in a conflict if two modules exported the same C++ type, which is especially problematic for very common types, e.g. std::vector<int>
. module_local
were added to resolve this (see that section for a complete usage guide).
py::class_
still defaults to global bindings (because these types are usually unique across modules), however in order to avoid clashes of opaque types, py::bind_vector
and py::bind_map
will now bind STL containers as py::module_local
if their elements are: builtins (int
, float
, etc.), not bound using py::class_
, or bound as py::module_local
. For example, this change allows multiple modules to bind std::vector<int>
without causing conflicts. See stl_bind
for more details.
When upgrading to this version, if you have multiple modules which depend on a single global binding of an STL container, note that all modules can still accept foreign py::module_local
types in the direction of Python-to-C++. The locality only affects the C++-to-Python direction. If this is needed in multiple modules, you'll need to either:
- Add a copy of the same STL binding to all of the modules which need it.
- Restore the global status of that single binding by marking it
py::module_local(false)
.
The latter is an easy workaround, but in the long run it would be best to localize all common type bindings in order to avoid conflicts with third-party modules.
Negative strides for Python buffer objects and numpy arrays
Support for negative strides required changing the integer type from unsigned to signed in the interfaces of py::buffer_info
and py::array
. If you have compiler warnings enabled, you may notice some new conversion warnings after upgrading. These can be resolved using static_cast
.
Deprecation of some py::object
APIs
To compare py::object
instances by pointer, you should now use obj1.is(obj2)
which is equivalent to obj1 is obj2
in Python. Previously, pybind11 used operator==
for this (obj1 == obj2
), but that could be confusing and is now deprecated (so that it can eventually be replaced with proper rich object comparison in a future release).
For classes which inherit from py::object
, borrowed
and stolen
were previously available as protected constructor tags. Now the types should be used directly instead: borrowed_t{}
and stolen_t{}
(#771).
Stricter compile-time error checking
Some error checks have been moved from run time to compile time. Notably, automatic conversion of std::shared_ptr<T>
is not possible when T
is not directly registered with py::class_<T>
(e.g. std::shared_ptr<int>
or std::shared_ptr<std::vector<T>>
are not automatically convertible). Attempting to bind a function with such arguments now results in a compile-time error instead of waiting to fail at run time.
py::init<...>()
constructor definitions are also stricter and now prevent bindings which could cause unexpected behavior:
struct Example {
int &);
Example(
};
class_<Example>(m, "Example")
py::int &>()); // OK, exact match
.def(py::init<// .def(py::init<int>()); // compile-time error, mismatch
A non-const
lvalue reference is not allowed to bind to an rvalue. However, note that a constructor taking const T &
can still be registered using py::init<T>()
because a const
lvalue reference can bind to an rvalue.
v2.1
Minimum compiler versions are enforced at compile time
The minimums also apply to v2.0 but the check is now explicit and a compile-time error is raised if the compiler does not meet the requirements:
- GCC >= 4.8
- clang >= 3.3 (appleclang >= 5.0)
- MSVC >= 2015u3
- Intel C++ >= 15.0
The py::metaclass
attribute is not required for static properties
Binding classes with static properties is now possible by default. The zero-parameter version of py::metaclass()
is deprecated. However, a new one-parameter py::metaclass(python_type)
version was added for rare cases when a custom metaclass is needed to override pybind11's default.
// old -- emits a deprecation warning
class_<Foo>(m, "Foo", py::metaclass())
py::"foo", ...);
.def_property_readonly_static(
// new -- static properties work without the attribute
class_<Foo>(m, "Foo")
py::"foo", ...);
.def_property_readonly_static(
// new -- advanced feature, override pybind11's default metaclass
class_<Bar>(m, "Bar", py::metaclass(custom_python_type))
py:: ...
v2.0
Breaking changes in py::class_
These changes were necessary to make type definitions in pybind11 future-proof, to support PyPy via its cpyext
mechanism (#527), and to improve efficiency (rev. 86d825).
Declarations of types that provide access via the buffer protocol must now include the
py::buffer_protocol()
annotation as an argument to thepy::class_
constructor.class_<Matrix>("Matrix", py::buffer_protocol()) py:: .def(py::init<...>()) .def_buffer(...);
Classes which include static properties (e.g.
def_readwrite_static()
) must now include thepy::metaclass()
attribute. Note: this requirement has since been removed in v2.1. If you're upgrading from 1.x, it's recommended to skip directly to v2.1 or newer.This version of pybind11 uses a redesigned mechanism for instantiating trampoline classes that are used to override virtual methods from within Python. This led to the following user-visible syntax change:
// old v1.x syntax class_<TrampolineClass>("MyClass") py:: .alias<MyClass>() ... // new v2.x syntax class_<MyClass, TrampolineClass>("MyClass") py:: ...
Importantly, both the original and the trampoline class are now specified as arguments to the
py::class_
template, and thealias<..>()
call is gone. The new scheme has zero overhead in cases when Python doesn't override any functions of the underlying C++ class. rev. 86d825.The class type must be the first template argument given to
py::class_
while the trampoline can be mixed in arbitrary order with other arguments (see the following section).
Deprecation of the py::base<T>()
attribute
py::base<T>()
was deprecated in favor of specifying T
as a template argument to py::class_
. This new syntax also supports multiple inheritance. Note that, while the type being exported must be the first argument in the py::class_<Class, ...>
template, the order of the following types (bases, holder and/or trampoline) is not important.
// old v1.x
class_<Derived>("Derived", py::base<Base>());
py::
// new v2.x
class_<Derived, Base>("Derived");
py::
// new -- multiple inheritance
class_<Derived, Base1, Base2>("Derived");
py::
// new -- apart from `Derived` the argument order can be arbitrary
class_<Derived, Base1, Holder, Base2, Trampoline>("Derived"); py::
Out-of-the-box support for std::shared_ptr
The relevant type caster is now built in, so it's no longer necessary to include a declaration of the form:
std::shared_ptr<T>) PYBIND11_DECLARE_HOLDER_TYPE(T,
Continuing to do so won't cause an error or even a deprecation warning, but it's completely redundant.
Deprecation of a few py::object
APIs
All of the old-style calls emit deprecation warnings.
Old syntax | New syntax |
---|---|
obj.call(args...) |
obj(args...) |
obj.str() |
py::str(obj) |
auto l = py::list(obj); l.check() |
py::isinstance<py::list>(obj) |
py::object(ptr, true) |
py::reinterpret_borrow<py::object>(ptr) |
py::object(ptr, false) |
py::reinterpret_steal<py::object>(ptr) |
if (obj.attr("foo")) |
if (py::hasattr(obj, "foo")) |
if (obj["bar"]) |
if (obj.contains("bar")) |