What’s New
v1.11.2
- Fix Windows issue with managing the thread-state on CPython 3.0 to 3.5
v1.11.1
- Fix tests, remove deprecated C API usage
- Fix (hack) for 3.6.0/3.6.1/3.6.2 giving incompatible binary extensions
(cpython issue #29943)
- Fix for 3.7.0a1+
v1.11
- Support the modern standard types char16_t and char32_t.
These work like wchar_t: they represent one unicode character, or
when used as charN_t * or charN_t[] they represent a unicode
string. The difference with wchar_t is that they have a known,
fixed size. They should work at all places that used to work with
wchar_t (please report an issue if I missed something). Note
that with set_source(), you need to make sure that these types are
actually defined by the C source you provide (if used in cdef()).
- Support the C99 types float _Complex and double _Complex.
Note that libffi doesn’t support them, which means that in the ABI
mode you still cannot call C functions that take complex numbers
directly as arguments or return type.
- Fixed a rare race condition when creating multiple FFI instances
from multiple threads. (Note that you aren’t meant to create many
FFI instances: in inline mode, you should write ffi =
cffi.FFI() at module level just after import cffi; and in
out-of-line mode you don’t instantiate FFI explicitly at all.)
- Windows: using callbacks can be messy because the CFFI internal error
messages show up to stderr—but stderr goes nowhere in many
applications. This makes it particularly hard to get started with the
embedding mode. (Once you get started, you can at least use
@ffi.def_extern(onerror=...) and send the error logs where it
makes sense for your application, or record them in log files, and so
on.) So what is new in CFFI is that now, on Windows CFFI will try to
open a non-modal MessageBox (in addition to sending raw messages to
stderr). The MessageBox is only visible if the process stays alive:
typically, console applications that crash close immediately, but that
is also the situation where stderr should be visible anyway.
- Progress on support for callbacks in NetBSD.
- Functions returning booleans would in some case still return 0 or 1
instead of False or True. Fixed.
- ffi.gc() now takes an optional third parameter, which gives an
estimate of the size (in bytes) of the object. So far, this is only
used by PyPy, to make the next GC occur more quickly (issue #320).
In the future, this might have an effect on CPython too (provided
the CPython issue 31105 is addressed).
- Add a note to the documentation: the ABI mode gives function objects
that are slower to call than the API mode does. For some reason it
is often thought to be faster. It is not!
v1.10.1
(only released inside PyPy 5.8.0)
- Fixed the line numbers reported in case of cdef() errors.
Also, I just noticed, but pycparser always supported the preprocessor
directive # 42 "foo.h" to mean “from the next line, we’re in file
foo.h starting from line 42”, which it puts in the error messages.
v1.10
- Issue #295: use calloc() directly instead of
PyObject_Malloc()+memset() to handle ffi.new() with a default
allocator. Speeds up ffi.new(large-array) where most of the time
you never touch most of the array.
- Some OS/X build fixes (“only with Xcode but without CLT”).
- Improve a couple of error messages: when getting mismatched versions
of cffi and its backend; and when calling functions which cannot be
called with libffi because an argument is a struct that is “too
complicated” (and not a struct pointer, which always works).
- Add support for some unusual compilers (non-msvc, non-gcc, non-icc,
non-clang)
- Implemented the remaining cases for ffi.from_buffer. Now all
buffer/memoryview objects can be passed. The one remaining check is
against passing unicode strings in Python 2. (They support the buffer
interface, but that gives the raw bytes behind the UTF16/UCS4 storage,
which is most of the times not what you expect. In Python 3 this has
been fixed and the unicode strings don’t support the memoryview
interface any more.)
- The C type _Bool or bool now converts to a Python boolean
when reading, instead of the content of the byte as an integer. The
potential incompatibility here is what occurs if the byte contains a
value different from 0 and 1. Previously, it would just return it;
with this change, CFFI raises an exception in this case. But this
case means “undefined behavior” in C; if you really have to interface
with a library relying on this, don’t use bool in the CFFI side.
Also, it is still valid to use a byte string as initializer for a
bool[], but now it must only contain \x00 or \x01. As an
aside, ffi.string() no longer works on bool[] (but it never
made much sense, as this function stops at the first zero).
- ffi.buffer is now the name of cffi’s buffer type, and
ffi.buffer() works like before but is the constructor of that type.
- ffi.addressof(lib, "name") now works also in in-line mode, not
only in out-of-line mode. This is useful for taking the address of
global variables.
- Issue #255: cdata objects of a primitive type (integers, floats,
char) are now compared and ordered by value. For example, <cdata
'int' 42> compares equal to 42 and <cdata 'char' b'A'>
compares equal to b'A'. Unlike C, <cdata 'int' -1> does not
compare equal to ffi.cast("unsigned int", -1): it compares
smaller, because -1 < 4294967295.
- PyPy: ffi.new() and ffi.new_allocator()() did not record
“memory pressure”, causing the GC to run too infrequently if you call
ffi.new() very often and/or with large arrays. Fixed in PyPy 5.7.
- Support in ffi.cdef() for numeric expressions with + or
-. Assumes that there is no overflow; it should be fixed first
before we add more general support for arbitrary arithmetic on
constants.
v1.9
- Structs with variable-sized arrays as their last field: now we track
the length of the array after ffi.new() is called, just like we
always tracked the length of ffi.new("int[]", 42). This lets us
detect out-of-range accesses to array items. This also lets us
display a better repr(), and have the total size returned by
ffi.sizeof() and ffi.buffer(). Previously both functions
would return a result based on the size of the declared structure
type, with an assumed empty array. (Thanks andrew for starting this
refactoring.)
- Add support in cdef()/set_source() for unspecified-length arrays
in typedefs: typedef int foo_t[...];. It was already supported
for global variables or structure fields.
- I turned in v1.8 a warning from cffi/model.py into an error:
'enum xxx' has no values explicitly defined: refusing to guess which
integer type it is meant to be (unsigned/signed, int/long). Now I’m
turning it back to a warning again; it seems that guessing that the
enum has size int is a 99%-safe bet. (But not 100%, so it stays
as a warning.)
- Fix leaks in the code handling FILE * arguments. In CPython 3
there is a remaining issue that is hard to fix: if you pass a Python
file object to a FILE * argument, then os.dup() is used and
the new file descriptor is only closed when the GC reclaims the Python
file object—and not at the earlier time when you call close(),
which only closes the original file descriptor. If this is an issue,
you should avoid this automatic convertion of Python file objects:
instead, explicitly manipulate file descriptors and call fdopen()
from C (...via cffi).
v1.8.3
- When passing a void * argument to a function with a different
pointer type, or vice-versa, the cast occurs automatically, like in C.
The same occurs for initialization with ffi.new() and a few other
places. However, I thought that char * had the same
property—but I was mistaken. In C you get the usual warning if you
try to give a char * to a char ** argument, for example.
Sorry about the confusion. This has been fixed in CFFI by giving for
now a warning, too. It will turn into an error in a future version.
v1.8.2
- Issue #283: fixed ffi.new() on structures/unions with nested
anonymous structures/unions, when there is at least one union in
the mix. When initialized with a list or a dict, it should now
behave more closely like the { } syntax does in GCC.
v1.8.1
- CPython 3.x: experimental: the generated C extension modules now use
the “limited API”, which means that, as a compiled .so/.dll, it should
work directly on any version of CPython >= 3.2. The name produced by
distutils is still version-specific. To get the version-independent
name, you can rename it manually to NAME.abi3.so, or use the very
recent setuptools 26.
- Added ffi.compile(debug=...), similar to python setup.py build
--debug but defaulting to True if we are running a debugging
version of Python itself.
v1.8
- Removed the restriction that ffi.from_buffer() cannot be used on
byte strings. Now you can get a char * out of a byte string,
which is valid as long as the string object is kept alive. (But
don’t use it to modify the string object! If you need this, use
bytearray or other official techniques.)
- PyPy 5.4 can now pass a byte string directly to a char *
argument (in older versions, a copy would be made). This used to be
a CPython-only optimization.
v1.7
- ffi.gc(p, None) removes the destructor on an object previously
created by another call to ffi.gc()
- bool(ffi.cast("primitive type", x)) now returns False if the
value is zero (including -0.0), and True otherwise. Previously
this would only return False for cdata objects of a pointer type when
the pointer is NULL.
- bytearrays: ffi.from_buffer(bytearray-object) is now supported.
(The reason it was not supported was that it was hard to do in PyPy,
but it works since PyPy 5.3.) To call a C function with a char *
argument from a buffer object—now including bytearrays—you write
lib.foo(ffi.from_buffer(x)). Additionally, this is now supported:
p[0:length] = bytearray-object. The problem with this was that a
iterating over bytearrays gives numbers instead of characters.
(Now it is implemented with just a memcpy, of course, not actually
iterating over the characters.)
- C++: compiling the generated C code with C++ was supposed to work,
but failed if you make use the bool type (because that is rendered
as the C _Bool type, which doesn’t exist in C++).
- help(lib) and help(lib.myfunc) now give useful information,
as well as dir(p) where p is a struct or pointer-to-struct.
v1.6
- ffi.list_types()
- ffi.unpack()
- extern “Python+C”
- in API mode, lib.foo.__doc__ contains the C signature now. On
CPython you can say help(lib.foo), but for some reason
help(lib) (or help(lib.foo) on PyPy) is still useless; I
haven’t yet figured out the hacks needed to convince pydoc to
show more. (You can use dir(lib) but it is not most helpful.)
- Yet another attempt at robustness of ffi.def_extern() against
CPython’s interpreter shutdown logic.
v1.5.2
- Fix 1.5.1 for Python 2.6.
v1.5.1
- A few installation-time tweaks (thanks Stefano!)
- Issue #245: Win32: __stdcall was never generated for
extern "Python" functions
- Issue #246: trying to be more robust against CPython’s fragile
interpreter shutdown logic
v1.4.2
Nothing changed from v1.4.1.
v1.4.1
- Fix the compilation failure of cffi on CPython 3.5.0. (3.5.1 works;
some detail changed that makes some underscore-starting macros
disappear from view of extension modules, and I worked around it,
thinking it changed in all 3.5 versions—but no: it was only in
3.5.1.)
v1.4.0
- A better way to do callbacks has been added (faster and more
portable, and usually cleaner). It is a mechanism for the
out-of-line API mode that replaces the dynamic creation of callback
objects (i.e. C functions that invoke Python) with the static
declaration in cdef() of which callbacks are needed. This is
more C-like, in that you have to structure your code around the idea
that you get a fixed number of function pointers, instead of
creating them on-the-fly.
- ffi.compile() now takes an optional verbose argument. When
True, distutils prints the calls to the compiler.
- ffi.compile() used to fail if given sources with a path that
includes "..". Fixed.
- ffi.init_once() added. See docs.
- dir(lib) now works on libs returned by ffi.dlopen() too.
- Cleaned up and modernized the content of the demo subdirectory
in the sources (thanks matti!).
- ffi.new_handle() is now guaranteed to return unique void *
values, even if called twice on the same object. Previously, in
that case, CPython would return two cdata objects with the same
void * value. This change is useful to add and remove handles
from a global dict (or set) without worrying about duplicates.
It already used to work like that on PyPy.
This change can break code that used to work on CPython by relying
on the object to be kept alive by other means than keeping the
result of ffi.new_handle() alive. (The corresponding warning in
the docs of ffi.new_handle() has been here since v0.8!)
v1.3.1
- The optional typedefs (bool, FILE and all Windows types) were
not always available from out-of-line FFI objects.
- Opaque enums are phased out from the cdefs: they now give a warning,
instead of (possibly wrongly) being assumed equal to unsigned int.
Please report if you get a reasonable use case for them.
- Some parsing details, notably volatile is passed along like
const and restrict. Also, older versions of pycparser
mis-parse some pointer-to-pointer types like char * const *: the
“const” ends up at the wrong place. Added a workaround.
v1.3.0
- Added ffi.memmove().
- Pull request #64: out-of-line API mode: we can now declare
floating-point types with typedef float... foo_t;. This only
works if foo_t is a float or a double, not long double.
- Issue #217: fix possible unaligned pointer manipulation, which crashes
on some architectures (64-bit, non-x86).
- Issues #64 and #126: when using set_source() or verify(),
the const and restrict keywords are copied from the cdef
to the generated C code; this fixes warnings by the C compiler.
It also fixes corner cases like typedef const int T; T a;
which would previously not consider a as a constant. (The
cdata objects themselves are never const.)
- Win32: support for __stdcall. For callbacks and function
pointers; regular C functions still don’t need to have their calling
convention declared.
- Windows: CPython 2.7 distutils doesn’t work with Microsoft’s official
Visual Studio for Python, and I’m told this is not a bug. For
ffi.compile(), we removed a workaround that was inside cffi but
which had unwanted side-effects. Try saying import setuptools
first, which patches distutils...
v1.2.1
Nothing changed from v1.2.0.
v1.2.0
- Out-of-line mode: int a[][...]; can be used to declare a structure
field or global variable which is, simultaneously, of total length
unknown to the C compiler (the a[] part) and each element is
itself an array of N integers, where the value of N is known to the
C compiler (the int and [...] parts around it). Similarly,
int a[5][...]; is supported (but probably less useful: remember
that in C it means int (a[5])[...];).
- PyPy: the lib.some_function objects were missing the attributes
__name__, __module__ and __doc__ that are expected e.g. by
some decorators-management functions from functools.
- Out-of-line API mode: you can now do from _example.lib import x
to import the name x from _example.lib, even though the
lib object is not a standard module object. (Also works in from
_example.lib import *, but this is even more of a hack and will fail
if lib happens to declare a name called __all__. Note that
* excludes the global variables; only the functions and constants
make sense to import like this.)
- lib.__dict__ works again and gives you a copy of the
dict—assuming that lib has got no symbol called precisely
__dict__. (In general, it is safer to use dir(lib).)
- Out-of-line API mode: global variables are now fetched on demand at
every access. It fixes issue #212 (Windows DLL variables), and also
allows variables that are defined as dynamic macros (like errno)
or __thread -local variables. (This change might also tighten
the C compiler’s check on the variables’ type.)
- Issue #209: dereferencing NULL pointers now raises RuntimeError
instead of segfaulting. Meant as a debugging aid. The check is
only for NULL: if you dereference random or dead pointers you might
still get segfaults.
- Issue #152: callbacks: added an argument ffi.callback(...,
onerror=...). If the main callback function raises an exception
and onerror is provided, then onerror(exception, exc_value,
traceback) is called. This is similar to writing a try:
except: in the main callback function, but in some cases (e.g. a
signal) an exception can occur at the very start of the callback
function—before it had time to enter the try: except: block.
- Issue #115: added ffi.new_allocator(), which officializes
support for alternative allocators.
v1.1.2
- ffi.gc(): fixed a race condition in multithreaded programs
introduced in 1.1.1
v1.1.1
- Out-of-line mode: ffi.string(), ffi.buffer() and
ffi.getwinerror() didn’t accept their arguments as keyword
arguments, unlike their in-line mode equivalent. (It worked in PyPy.)
- Out-of-line ABI mode: documented a restriction of ffi.dlopen()
when compared to the in-line mode.
- ffi.gc(): when called several times with equal pointers, it was
accidentally registering only the last destructor, or even none at
all depending on details. (It was correctly registering all of them
only in PyPy, and only with the out-of-line FFIs.)
v1.1.0
- Out-of-line API mode: we can now declare integer types with
typedef int... foo_t;. The exact size and signedness of foo_t
is figured out by the compiler.
- Out-of-line API mode: we can now declare multidimensional arrays
(as fields or as globals) with int n[...][...]. Before, only the
outermost dimension would support the ... syntax.
- Out-of-line ABI mode: we now support any constant declaration,
instead of only integers whose value is given in the cdef. Such “new”
constants, i.e. either non-integers or without a value given in the
cdef, must correspond to actual symbols in the lib. At runtime they
are looked up the first time we access them. This is useful if the
library defines extern const sometype somename;.
- ffi.addressof(lib, "func_name") now returns a regular cdata object
of type “pointer to function”. You can use it on any function from a
library in API mode (in ABI mode, all functions are already regular
cdata objects). To support this, you need to recompile your cffi
modules.
- Issue #198: in API mode, if you declare constants of a struct
type, what you saw from lib.CONSTANT was corrupted.
- Issue #196: ffi.set_source("package._ffi", None) would
incorrectly generate the Python source to package._ffi.py instead
of package/_ffi.py. Also fixed: in some cases, if the C file was
in build/foo.c, the .o file would be put in build/build/foo.o.
v1.0.3
- Same as 1.0.2, apart from doc and test fixes on some platforms.
v1.0.2
- Variadic C functions (ending in a ”...” argument) were not supported
in the out-of-line ABI mode. This was a bug—there was even a
(non-working) example doing exactly that!
v1.0.1
- ffi.set_source() crashed if passed a sources=[..] argument.
Fixed by chrippa on pull request #60.
- Issue #193: if we use a struct between the first cdef() where it is
declared and another cdef() where its fields are defined, then this
definition was ignored.
- Enums were buggy if you used too many ”...” in their definition.
v1.0.0
- The main news item is out-of-line module generation:
- (this page will list what is new from all versions from 1.0.0
forward.)