PyMaemo/Accessing APIs without Python bindings
This is an on-going document, and will be linked on the PyMaemo main page once finished
Contents |
Introduction
There are many libraries written in C that do not have native Python bindings yet. In Maemo, one of such libraries is libosso-abook, which manipulates the address book on Maemo devices.
While a full binding is very useful, in most cases you need to use just a couple of functions and data structures to get your work done. Instead of waiting for a binding to be implemented, you can use Python's ctypes
module, which allows to directly call functions and access data structures from C libraries.
This document will explain how to do call C library functions using ctypes
, using mainly libosso-abook as an example. The idea has been borrowed from Hermes application source code, which in turn is based on the trick described on the PyGTK FAQ.
This document is not meant to be a complete ctypes
guide; for that, be sure to read the official API documentation. It is assumed that you have read that document before continuing.
Basic usage
Let's say you want to use printf() from the GNU C Library. All you need in Python is:
import ctypes libc = ctypes.CDLL('libc.so.6') libc.printf('Hello world!')
In a few words, you create an object correspondent to the library you need and use it to call the function directly. You can also store the functions in plain python objects to use them easily later:
c_printf = libc.printf c_printf('Hello libc')
Remember that those are C functions, not Python ones, so you must supply arguments of the correct type to avoid undefined behavior (such as segmentation faults). As an example, if an integer is passed to the above function, you get
>>> c_printf(1) Segmentation fault (core dumped)
Initializing libosso-abook
libosso-abook needs to be initialized by calling osso-abook-init(). This is similar to the example above, but a little more complex because the function takes three pointers: argc, argv and the OSSO context. First of all, you must create a osso.Context instance using the "osso" module (provided python-osso):
import osso osso_ctx = osso.Context("test_abook", "0.1")
Note: there is no documentation for python-osso yet, so see the C documentation for osso_initialize() for details about osso.Context() arguments. Note that only "application" and "version" attributes are used in Python.
Next, load and initialize libosso-abook library:
import sys osso_abook = ctypes.CDLL('libosso-abook-1.0.so.0') argv_type = ctypes.c_char_p * len(sys.argv) argv = argv_type(*sys.argv) argc = ctypes.c_int(len(sys.argv)) osso_abook.osso_abook_init(ctypes.byref(argc), ctypes.byref(argv), hash(osso_ctx))
The byref() function returns a pointer to the given data. The hash() function returns the memory address of the argument.
Calling a function which returns a GObject (i.e. a constructor)
Every GObject instance created by a C library must have a corresponding Python object, so that it can be manipulated on Python code. This object, which acts like a "wrapper" around the C pointer, is created using the pygobject_new() C function. Unfortunately, pygobject_new() is not a plain function, but a macro which points to a function pointer in a struct (see /usr/include/pygtk-2.0/pygobject.h on the "#define pygobject_new ..." line), making it a little more complex to be called from Python. The snippet of code below, borrowed from PyGTK FAQ, will take care of this:
# ctypes wrapper for pygobject_new(), based on code snippet from # http://faq.pygtk.org/index.py?req=show&file=faq23.041.htp class _PyGObject_Functions(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ ('register_class', ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.c_void_p, ctypes.c_char_p, ctypes.c_int, ctypes.py_object, ctypes.py_object)), ('register_wrapper', ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.c_void_p, ctypes.py_object)), ('register_sinkfunc', ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.py_object, ctypes.c_void_p)), ('lookupclass', ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.py_object, ctypes.c_int)), ('newgobj', ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.py_object, ctypes.c_void_p)), ]
class PyGObjectCPAI(object): def __init__(self): py_obj = ctypes.py_object(gobject._PyGObject_API) addr = ctypes.pythonapi.PyCObject_AsVoidPtr(py_obj) self._api = _PyGObject_Functions.from_address(addr)
def pygobject_new(self, addr): return self._api.newgobj(addr)
Adding this to your code, you will be able to create Python objects from an arbitrary GObject pointer, simply using something like:
capi = PyGObjectCPAI() c_obj = c_function_returning_gobject(...) obj = capi.pygobject_new(c_obj)
Creating a OssoABookContactChooser instance
As an example of a GObject instantiation, let's call the osso_abook_contact_chooser_new() constructor from Python, which creates a "contact chooser" dialog useful to select one of more contacts:
c_chooser = osso_abook.osso_abook_contact_chooser_new(None, "Choose a contact") chooser = capi.pygobject_new(c_chooser)
After this, you can use chooser
like any other GObject in Python, including calling inherited methods:
chooser.run() chooser.hide()