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Migration towards Python3, first stage: still based on C-Macros. * New: Python/C++ API level: * Write a new C++/template wrapper to get rid of boost::python * The int & long Python type are now merged. So a C/C++ level, it became "PyLong_X" (remove "PyInt_X") and at Python code level, it became "int" (remove "long"). * Change: VLSISAPD finally defunct. * Configuration is now integrated as a Hurricane component, makes use of the new C++/template wrapper. * vlsisapd is now defunct. Keep it in the source for now as some remaining non essential code may have to be ported in the future. * Note: Python code (copy of the migration howto): * New print function syntax print(). * Changed "dict.has_key(k)" for "k" in dict. * Changed "except Exception, e" for "except Exception as e". * The division "/" is now the floating point division, even if both operand are integers. So 3/2 now gives 1.5 and no longer 1. The integer division is now "//" : 1 = 3//2. So have to carefully review the code to update. Most of the time we want to use "//". We must never change to float for long that, in fact, represents DbU (exposed as Python int type). * execfile() must be replaced by exec(open("file").read()). * iter().__next__() becomes iter(x).__next__(). * __getslice__() has been removed, integrated to __getitem__(). * The formating used for str(type(o)) has changed, so In Stratus, have to update them ("<class 'MyClass'>" instead of "MyClass"). * the "types" module no longer supply values for default types like str (types.StringType) or list (types.StringType). Must use "isinstance()" where they were occuring. * Remove the 'L' to indicate "long integer" (like "12L"), now all Python integer are long. * Change in bootstrap: * Ported Coriolis builder (ccb) to Python3. * Ported Coriolis socInstaller.py to Python3. * Note: In PyQt4+Python3, QVariant no longer exists. Use None or directly convert using the python syntax: bool(x), int(x), ... By default, it is a string (str). * Note: PyQt4 bindings & Python3 under SL7. * In order to compile user's must upgrade to my own rebuild of PyQt 4 & 5 bindings 4.19.21-1.el7.soc. * Bug: In cumulus/plugins.block.htree.HTree.splitNet(), set the root buffer of the H-Tree to the original signal (mainly: top clock). Strangely, it was only done when working in full chip mode.
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.. -*- Mode: rst -*-
1. Introduction
===============
* This document is written for people already familiar with the
`Python/C API Reference Manual`_.
* The macros provided by the Hurricane Python/C API are written using
the standard Python C/API. That is, you may not use them and write
directly your functions with the original API or any mix between.
You only have to respect some naming convention.
* Coriolis is build against Python 3.6.
Migration towards Python3, first stage: still based on C-Macros. * New: Python/C++ API level: * Write a new C++/template wrapper to get rid of boost::python * The int & long Python type are now merged. So a C/C++ level, it became "PyLong_X" (remove "PyInt_X") and at Python code level, it became "int" (remove "long"). * Change: VLSISAPD finally defunct. * Configuration is now integrated as a Hurricane component, makes use of the new C++/template wrapper. * vlsisapd is now defunct. Keep it in the source for now as some remaining non essential code may have to be ported in the future. * Note: Python code (copy of the migration howto): * New print function syntax print(). * Changed "dict.has_key(k)" for "k" in dict. * Changed "except Exception, e" for "except Exception as e". * The division "/" is now the floating point division, even if both operand are integers. So 3/2 now gives 1.5 and no longer 1. The integer division is now "//" : 1 = 3//2. So have to carefully review the code to update. Most of the time we want to use "//". We must never change to float for long that, in fact, represents DbU (exposed as Python int type). * execfile() must be replaced by exec(open("file").read()). * iter().__next__() becomes iter(x).__next__(). * __getslice__() has been removed, integrated to __getitem__(). * The formating used for str(type(o)) has changed, so In Stratus, have to update them ("<class 'MyClass'>" instead of "MyClass"). * the "types" module no longer supply values for default types like str (types.StringType) or list (types.StringType). Must use "isinstance()" where they were occuring. * Remove the 'L' to indicate "long integer" (like "12L"), now all Python integer are long. * Change in bootstrap: * Ported Coriolis builder (ccb) to Python3. * Ported Coriolis socInstaller.py to Python3. * Note: In PyQt4+Python3, QVariant no longer exists. Use None or directly convert using the python syntax: bool(x), int(x), ... By default, it is a string (str). * Note: PyQt4 bindings & Python3 under SL7. * In order to compile user's must upgrade to my own rebuild of PyQt 4 & 5 bindings 4.19.21-1.el7.soc. * Bug: In cumulus/plugins.block.htree.HTree.splitNet(), set the root buffer of the H-Tree to the original signal (mainly: top clock). Strangely, it was only done when working in full chip mode.
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1.1 About Technical Choices
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some would say, why not use *off the shelf* wrappers like ``swig``,
``boost::python`` or ``pybind11``, here are some clues.
#. **Partial exposure of the C++ class tree.** We expose at Python level
C++ base classes, only if they provides common methods that we want
to see. Otherwise, we just show them as base classes under Python.
For instance ``Library`` is derived from ``DBo``, but we won't see
it under Python.
#. **Bi-directional communication.** When a Python object is deleted, the
wrapper obviously has a pointer toward the underlying C++ object and
is able to delete it. But, the reverse case can occurs, meaning that
you have a C++ object wrapped in Python and the database delete the
underlying object. The wrapped Python object *must* be informed that
it no longer refer a valid C++ one. Moreover, as we do not control
when Python objects gets deleteds (that is, when their reference count
reaches zero), we can have valid Python object with a dangling
C++ pointer. So our Python objects can be warned by the C++ objects
that they are no longer valid and any other operation than the
deletion should result in a severe non-blocking error.
To be precise, this apply to persistent object in the C++ database,
like ``Cell``, ``Net``, ``Instance`` or ``Component``. Short lived
objects like ``Box`` or ``Point`` retains the classic Python behavior.
Another aspect is that, for all derived ``DBo`` objects, one and only
one Python object is associated. For one given ``Instance`` object we
will always return the *same* ``PyInstance`` object, thanks to the
bi-directional link. Obviously, the *reference count* of the
``PyInstance`` is managed accordingly. This mechanism is implemented
by the ``PyTypeManager::_link()`` method.
#. **Linking accross modules.** As far as I understand, the wrappers
are for monolithic libraries. That is, you wrap the entire library
in one go. But Coriolis has a modular design, the core database
Migration towards Python3, first stage: still based on C-Macros. * New: Python/C++ API level: * Write a new C++/template wrapper to get rid of boost::python * The int & long Python type are now merged. So a C/C++ level, it became "PyLong_X" (remove "PyInt_X") and at Python code level, it became "int" (remove "long"). * Change: VLSISAPD finally defunct. * Configuration is now integrated as a Hurricane component, makes use of the new C++/template wrapper. * vlsisapd is now defunct. Keep it in the source for now as some remaining non essential code may have to be ported in the future. * Note: Python code (copy of the migration howto): * New print function syntax print(). * Changed "dict.has_key(k)" for "k" in dict. * Changed "except Exception, e" for "except Exception as e". * The division "/" is now the floating point division, even if both operand are integers. So 3/2 now gives 1.5 and no longer 1. The integer division is now "//" : 1 = 3//2. So have to carefully review the code to update. Most of the time we want to use "//". We must never change to float for long that, in fact, represents DbU (exposed as Python int type). * execfile() must be replaced by exec(open("file").read()). * iter().__next__() becomes iter(x).__next__(). * __getslice__() has been removed, integrated to __getitem__(). * The formating used for str(type(o)) has changed, so In Stratus, have to update them ("<class 'MyClass'>" instead of "MyClass"). * the "types" module no longer supply values for default types like str (types.StringType) or list (types.StringType). Must use "isinstance()" where they were occuring. * Remove the 'L' to indicate "long integer" (like "12L"), now all Python integer are long. * Change in bootstrap: * Ported Coriolis builder (ccb) to Python3. * Ported Coriolis socInstaller.py to Python3. * Note: In PyQt4+Python3, QVariant no longer exists. Use None or directly convert using the python syntax: bool(x), int(x), ... By default, it is a string (str). * Note: PyQt4 bindings & Python3 under SL7. * In order to compile user's must upgrade to my own rebuild of PyQt 4 & 5 bindings 4.19.21-1.el7.soc. * Bug: In cumulus/plugins.block.htree.HTree.splitNet(), set the root buffer of the H-Tree to the original signal (mainly: top clock). Strangely, it was only done when working in full chip mode.
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then various tools. We do not, and cannot, have one gigantic wrapper
that would encompass all the libraries in one go. We do one Python
module for each C++ library.
Migration towards Python3, first stage: still based on C-Macros. * New: Python/C++ API level: * Write a new C++/template wrapper to get rid of boost::python * The int & long Python type are now merged. So a C/C++ level, it became "PyLong_X" (remove "PyInt_X") and at Python code level, it became "int" (remove "long"). * Change: VLSISAPD finally defunct. * Configuration is now integrated as a Hurricane component, makes use of the new C++/template wrapper. * vlsisapd is now defunct. Keep it in the source for now as some remaining non essential code may have to be ported in the future. * Note: Python code (copy of the migration howto): * New print function syntax print(). * Changed "dict.has_key(k)" for "k" in dict. * Changed "except Exception, e" for "except Exception as e". * The division "/" is now the floating point division, even if both operand are integers. So 3/2 now gives 1.5 and no longer 1. The integer division is now "//" : 1 = 3//2. So have to carefully review the code to update. Most of the time we want to use "//". We must never change to float for long that, in fact, represents DbU (exposed as Python int type). * execfile() must be replaced by exec(open("file").read()). * iter().__next__() becomes iter(x).__next__(). * __getslice__() has been removed, integrated to __getitem__(). * The formating used for str(type(o)) has changed, so In Stratus, have to update them ("<class 'MyClass'>" instead of "MyClass"). * the "types" module no longer supply values for default types like str (types.StringType) or list (types.StringType). Must use "isinstance()" where they were occuring. * Remove the 'L' to indicate "long integer" (like "12L"), now all Python integer are long. * Change in bootstrap: * Ported Coriolis builder (ccb) to Python3. * Ported Coriolis socInstaller.py to Python3. * Note: In PyQt4+Python3, QVariant no longer exists. Use None or directly convert using the python syntax: bool(x), int(x), ... By default, it is a string (str). * Note: PyQt4 bindings & Python3 under SL7. * In order to compile user's must upgrade to my own rebuild of PyQt 4 & 5 bindings 4.19.21-1.el7.soc. * Bug: In cumulus/plugins.block.htree.HTree.splitNet(), set the root buffer of the H-Tree to the original signal (mainly: top clock). Strangely, it was only done when working in full chip mode.
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This brings another issue, at Python level this time. The Python
modules for the libraries have to share some functions. Python
provides a mechanism to pass C function pointers accross modules,
(``Capsule``) but I did not fully understand it.
Instead, we register all the newly defined Python type object
in the ``PyTypeManager`` and we link the associated C++ library
into all Python modules. So all types and ancillary functions can
easily be seen accross modules.
This way, we do not rely upon a pointer transmission through Python
modules, but directly uses linker capabilities.
**The PyTypeManager** approach also suppress the need to *split* into
two libraries the Python modules like in the C-Macros implementation,
and the double compilation pass.