Sharing Declarations Between Cython Modules

This section describes a new set of facilities for making C declarations, functions and extension types in one Cython module available for use in another Cython module. These facilities are closely modeled on the Python import mechanism, and can be thought of as a compile-time version of it.

Definition and Implementation files

A Cython module can be split into two parts: a definition file with a .pxd suffix, containing C declarations that are to be available to other Cython modules, and an implementation file with a .pyx suffix, containing everything else. When a module wants to use something declared in another module’s definition file, it imports it using the cimport statement.

A .pxd file that consists solely of extern declarations does not need to correspond to an actual .pyx file or Python module. This can make it a convenient place to put common declarations, for example declarations of functions from an external library that one wants to use in several modules.

What a Definition File contains

A definition file can contain:

  • Any kind of C type declaration.
  • extern C function or variable declarations.
  • Declarations of C functions defined in the module.
  • The definition part of an extension type (see below).

It cannot contain the implementations of any C or Python functions, or any Python class definitions, or any executable statements. It is needed when one wants to access cdef attributes and methods, or to inherit from cdef classes defined in this module.

Note

You don’t need to (and shouldn’t) declare anything in a declaration file public in order to make it available to other Cython modules; its mere presence in a definition file does that. You only need a public declaration if you want to make something available to external C code.

What an Implementation File contains

An implementation file can contain any kind of Cython statement, although there are some restrictions on the implementation part of an extension type if the corresponding definition file also defines that type (see below). If one doesn’t need to cimport anything from this module, then this is the only file one needs.

The cimport statement

The cimport statement is used in a definition or implementation file to gain access to names declared in another definition file. Its syntax exactly parallels that of the normal Python import statement:

cimport module [, module...]

from module cimport name [as name] [, name [as name] ...]

Here is an example. dishes.pxd is a definition file which exports a C data type. restaurant.pxd an implementation file which imports and uses it.

dishes.pxd:

cdef enum otherstuff:
    sausage, eggs, lettuce

cdef struct spamdish:
    int oz_of_spam
    otherstuff filler

restaurant.pyx:

cimport dishes
from dishes cimport spamdish

cdef void prepare(spamdish *d):
    d.oz_of_spam = 42
    d.filler = dishes.sausage

def serve():
    cdef spamdish d
    prepare(&d)
    print "%d oz spam, filler no. %d" % (d.oz_of_spam, d.filler)

It is important to understand that the cimport statement can only be used to import C data types, C functions and variables, and extension types. It cannot be used to import any Python objects, and (with one exception) it doesn’t imply any Python import at run time. If you want to refer to any Python names from a module that you have cimported, you will have to include a regular import statement for it as well.

The exception is that when you use cimport to import an extension type, its type object is imported at run time and made available by the name under which you imported it. Using cimport to import extension types is covered in more detail below.

If a .pxd file changes, any modules that cimport from it may need to be recompiled. The Cython.Build.cythonize utility can take care of this for you.

Search paths for definition files

When you cimport a module called modulename, the Cython compiler searches for a file called modulename.pxd along the search path for include files, as specified by -I command line options.

Also, whenever you compile a file modulename.pyx, the corresponding definition file modulename.pxd is first searched for along the same path, and if found, it is processed before processing the .pyx file.

Using cimport to resolve naming conflicts

The cimport mechanism provides a clean and simple way to solve the problem of wrapping external C functions with Python functions of the same name. All you need to do is put the extern C declarations into a .pxd file for an imaginary module, and cimport that module. You can then refer to the C functions by qualifying them with the name of the module. Here’s an example:

c_lunch.pxd:

cdef extern from "lunch.h":
    void eject_tomato(float)

lunch.pyx:

cimport c_lunch

def eject_tomato(float speed):
    c_lunch.eject_tomato(speed)

You don’t need any c_lunch.pyx file, because the only things defined in c_lunch.pxd are extern C entities. There won’t be any actual c_lunch module at run time, but that doesn’t matter; the c_lunch.pxd file has done its job of providing an additional namespace at compile time.

Sharing C Functions

C functions defined at the top level of a module can be made available via cimport by putting headers for them in the .pxd file, for example,:

:file:`volume.pxd`::
cdef float cube(float)

volume.pyx:

cdef float cube(float x):
    return x * x * x

spammery.pyx:

from volume cimport cube

def menu(description, size):
    print description, ":", cube(size), \
        "cubic metres of spam"

menu("Entree", 1)
menu("Main course", 3)
menu("Dessert", 2)

Note

When a module exports a C function in this way, an object appears in the module dictionary under the function’s name. However, you can’t make use of this object from Python, nor can you use it from Cython using a normal import statement; you have to use cimport.

Sharing Extension Types

An extension type can be made available via cimport by splitting its definition into two parts, one in a definition file and the other in the corresponding implementation file.

The definition part of the extension type can only declare C attributes and C methods, not Python methods, and it must declare all of that type’s C attributes and C methods.

The implementation part must implement all of the C methods declared in the definition part, and may not add any further C attributes. It may also define Python methods.

Here is an example of a module which defines and exports an extension type, and another module which uses it:

Shrubbing.pxd:

cdef class Shrubbery:
    cdef int width
    cdef int length

Shrubbing.pyx:

cdef class Shrubbery:
    def __cinit__(self, int w, int l):
        self.width = w
        self.length = l

def standard_shrubbery():
    return Shrubbery(3, 7)

Landscaping.pyx:

cimport Shrubbing
import Shrubbing

cdef Shrubbing.Shrubbery sh
sh = Shrubbing.standard_shrubbery()
print "Shrubbery size is %d x %d" % (sh.width, sh.length)

One would then need to compile both of these modules, e.g. using

setup.py:

from distutils.core import setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize
setup(ext_modules = cythonize(["Landscaping.pyx", "Shrubbing.pyx"]))

Some things to note about this example:

  • There is a cdef class Shrubbery declaration in both Shrubbing.pxd and Shrubbing.pyx. When the Shrubbing module is compiled, these two declarations are combined into one.
  • In Landscaping.pyx, the cimport Shrubbing declaration allows us to refer to the Shrubbery type as Shrubbing.Shrubbery. But it doesn’t bind the name Shrubbing in Landscaping’s module namespace at run time, so to access Shrubbing.standard_shrubbery() we also need to import Shrubbing.