mirror of
https://github.com/capnproto/pycapnp.git
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177 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
177 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
# pycapnp
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More thorough docs are available at [http://jparyani.github.io/pycapnp/](http://jparyani.github.io/pycapnp/).
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## Requirements
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pycapnp's distribution has no requirements beyond a C++11 compatible compiler. GCC 4.8+ or Clang 3.3+ should work fine.
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pycapnp has additional development dependencies, including cython and py.test. See requirements.txt for them all.
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## Building and installation
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Install with `pip install pycapnp`. You can set the CC environment variable to control which compiler is used, ie `CC=gcc-4.8 pip install pycapnp`.
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Or you can clone the repo like so:
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git clone https://github.com/jparyani/pycapnp.git
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pip install --install-option '--force-cython' ./pycapnp
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Note: for OSX, if using clang from Xcode 5, you may need to set `CFLAGS` like so:
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CFLAGS='-stdlib=libc++' pip install pycapnp
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If you wish to install using the latest upstream C++ Cap'n Proto:
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pip install --install-option "--libcapnp-url" --install-option "https://github.com/sandstorm-io/capnproto/archive/master.tar.gz" --install-option "--force-bundled-libcapnp" .
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## Python Versions
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Python 2.6/2.7 are supported as well as Python 3.2+. PyPy 2.1+ is also supported.
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One oddity to note is that `Text` type fields will be treated as byte strings under Python 2, and unicode strings under Python 3. `Data` fields will always be treated as byte strings.
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## Development
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This project uses [git-flow](http://jeffkreeftmeijer.com/2010/why-arent-you-using-git-flow/). Essentially, just make sure you do your changes in the `develop` branch. You can run the tests by installing pytest with `pip install pytest`, and then run `py.test` from the `test` directory.
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### Binary Packages
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Building a dumb binary distribution:
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python setup.py bdist_dumb
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Building a Python wheel distributiion:
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python setup.py bdist_wheel
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If it fails with an error like `clang: error: no such file or directory: 'capnp/lib/capnp.cpp'`, then you need to cythonize fist. This can be done with:
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python setup.py build --force-cython
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## Documentation/Example
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There is some basic documentation [here](http://jparyani.github.io/pycapnp/).
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The examples directory has one example that shows off pycapnp quite nicely. Here it is, reproduced:
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```python
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from __future__ import print_function
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import os
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import capnp
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import addressbook_capnp
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def writeAddressBook(file):
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addresses = addressbook_capnp.AddressBook.new_message()
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people = addresses.init('people', 2)
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alice = people[0]
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alice.id = 123
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alice.name = 'Alice'
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alice.email = 'alice@example.com'
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alicePhones = alice.init('phones', 1)
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alicePhones[0].number = "555-1212"
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alicePhones[0].type = 'mobile'
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alice.employment.school = "MIT"
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bob = people[1]
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bob.id = 456
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bob.name = 'Bob'
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bob.email = 'bob@example.com'
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bobPhones = bob.init('phones', 2)
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bobPhones[0].number = "555-4567"
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bobPhones[0].type = 'home'
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bobPhones[1].number = "555-7654"
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bobPhones[1].type = 'work'
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bob.employment.unemployed = None
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addresses.write(file)
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def printAddressBook(file):
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addresses = addressbook_capnp.AddressBook.read(file)
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for person in addresses.people:
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print(person.name, ':', person.email)
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for phone in person.phones:
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print(phone.type, ':', phone.number)
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which = person.employment.which()
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print(which)
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if which == 'unemployed':
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print('unemployed')
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elif which == 'employer':
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print('employer:', person.employment.employer)
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elif which == 'school':
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print('student at:', person.employment.school)
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elif which == 'selfEmployed':
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print('self employed')
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print()
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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f = open('example', 'w')
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writeAddressBook(f)
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f = open('example', 'r')
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printAddressBook(f)
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```
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Also, pycapnp has gained RPC features that include pipelining and a promise style API. Refer to the calculator example in the examples directory for a much better demonstration:
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```python
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import capnp
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import socket
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import test_capability_capnp
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class Server(test_capability_capnp.TestInterface.Server):
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def __init__(self, val=1):
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self.val = val
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def foo(self, i, j, **kwargs):
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return str(i * 5 + self.val)
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def server(write_end):
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server = capnp.TwoPartyServer(write_end, bootstrap=Server(100))
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def client(read_end):
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client = capnp.TwoPartyClient(read_end)
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cap = client.bootstrap()
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cap = cap.cast_as(test_capability_capnp.TestInterface)
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remote = cap.foo(i=5)
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response = remote.wait()
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assert response.x == '125'
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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read_end, write_end = socket.socketpair(socket.AF_UNIX)
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# This is a toy example using socketpair.
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# In real situations, you can use any socket.
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server(write_end)
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client(read_end)
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```
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## Common Problems
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If you get an error on installation like:
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...
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gcc-4.8: error: capnp/capnp.c: No such file or directory
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gcc-4.8: fatal error: no input files
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Then you have too old a version of setuptools. Run `pip install -U setuptools` then try again.
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[](https://travis-ci.org/jparyani/pycapnp)
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