Source Files and Compilation

Cython source file names consist of the name of the module followed by a .pyx extension, for example a module called primes would have a source file named primes.pyx.

Cython code, unlike Python, must be compiled. This happens in two stages:

  • A .pyx (or .py) file is compiled by Cython to a .c file.

  • The .c file is compiled by a C compiler to a .so file (or a .pyd file on Windows)

Once you have written your .pyx/.py file, there are a couple of ways how to turn it into an extension module.

The following sub-sections describe several ways to build your extension modules, and how to pass directives to the Cython compiler.

There are also a number of tools that process .pyx files apart from Cython, e.g.

Compiling from the command line

There are two ways of compiling from the command line.

  • The cython command takes a .py or .pyx file and compiles it into a C/C++ file.

  • The cythonize command takes a .py or .pyx file and compiles it into a C/C++ file. It then compiles the C/C++ file into an extension module which is directly importable from Python.

Compiling with the cython command

One way is to compile it manually with the Cython compiler, e.g.:

$ cython primes.pyx

This will produce a file called primes.c, which then needs to be compiled with the C compiler using whatever options are appropriate on your platform for generating an extension module. For these options look at the official Python documentation.

The other, and probably better, way is to use the setuptools extension provided with Cython. The benefit of this method is that it will give the platform specific compilation options, acting like a stripped down autotools.

Compiling with the cythonize command

Run the cythonize compiler command with your options and list of .pyx files to generate an extension module. For example:

$ cythonize -a -i yourmod.pyx

This creates a yourmod.c file (or yourmod.cpp in C++ mode), compiles it, and puts the resulting extension module (.so or .pyd, depending on your platform) next to the source file for direct import (-i builds “in place”). The -a switch additionally produces an annotated html file of the source code.

The cythonize command accepts multiple source files and glob patterns like **/*.pyx as argument and also understands the common -j option for running multiple parallel build jobs. When called without further options, it will only translate the source files to .c or .cpp files. Pass the -h flag for a complete list of supported options.

There simpler command line tool cython only invokes the source code translator.

In the case of manual compilation, how to compile your .c files will vary depending on your operating system and compiler. The Python documentation for writing extension modules should have some details for your system. On a Linux system, for example, it might look similar to this:

$ gcc -shared -pthread -fPIC -fwrapv -O2 -Wall -fno-strict-aliasing \
      -I/usr/include/python3.5 -o yourmod.so yourmod.c

(gcc will need to have paths to your included header files and paths to libraries you want to link with.)

After compilation, a yourmod.so (yourmod.pyd for Windows) file is written into the target directory and your module, yourmod, is available for you to import as with any other Python module. Note that if you are not relying on cythonize or setuptools, you will not automatically benefit from the platform specific file extension that CPython generates for disambiguation, such as yourmod.cpython-35m-x86_64-linux-gnu.so on a regular 64bit Linux installation of CPython 3.5.

Basic setup.py

The setuptools extension provided with Cython allows you to pass .pyx files directly to the Extension constructor in your setup file.

If you have a single Cython file that you want to turn into a compiled extension, say with filename example.pyx the associated setup.py would be:

from setuptools import setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize

setup(
    ext_modules = cythonize("example.pyx")
)

If your build depends directly on Cython in this way, then you may also want to inform pip that Cython is required for setup.py to execute, following PEP 518 <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0518/>, creating a pyproject.toml file containing, at least:

[build-system]
requires = ["setuptools", "wheel", "Cython"]

To understand the setup.py more fully look at the official setuptools documentation. To compile the extension for use in the current directory use:

$ python setup.py build_ext --inplace

Configuring the C-Build

Note

More details on building Cython modules that use cimport numpy can be found in the Numpy section of the user guide.

If you have Cython include files or Cython definition files in non-standard places you can pass an include_path parameter to cythonize:

from setuptools import setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize

setup(
    name="My hello app",
    ext_modules=cythonize("src/*.pyx", include_path=[...]),
)

If you need to specify compiler options, libraries to link with or other linker options you will need to create Extension instances manually (note that glob syntax can still be used to specify multiple extensions in one line):

from setuptools import Extension, setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize

extensions = [
    Extension("primes", ["primes.pyx"],
        include_dirs=[...],
        libraries=[...],
        library_dirs=[...]),
    # Everything but primes.pyx is included here.
    Extension("*", ["*.pyx"],
        include_dirs=[...],
        libraries=[...],
        library_dirs=[...]),
]
setup(
    name="My hello app",
    ext_modules=cythonize(extensions),
)

Some useful options to know about are

  • include_dirs- list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix form for portability),

  • libraries - list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against,

  • library_dirs - list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time.

Note that when using setuptools, you should import it before Cython, otherwise, both might disagree about the class to use here.

Often, Python packages that offer a C-level API provide a way to find the necessary C header files:

from setuptools import Extension, setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize

extensions = [
    Extension("*", ["*.pyx"],
        include_dirs=["/usr/local/include"]),
]
setup(
    name="My hello app",
    ext_modules=cythonize(extensions),
)

If your options are static (for example you do not need to call a tool like pkg-config to determine them) you can also provide them directly in your .pyx or .pxd source file using a special comment block at the start of the file:

# distutils: libraries = spam eggs
# distutils: include_dirs = /opt/food/include

If you cimport multiple .pxd files defining libraries, then Cython merges the list of libraries, so this works as expected (similarly with other options, like include_dirs above).

If you have some C files that have been wrapped with Cython and you want to compile them into your extension, you can define the setuptools sources parameter:

# distutils: sources = [helper.c, another_helper.c]

Note that these sources are added to the list of sources of the current extension module. Spelling this out in the setup.py file looks as follows:

from setuptools import Extension, setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize

sourcefiles = ['example.pyx', 'helper.c', 'another_helper.c']

extensions = [Extension("example", sourcefiles)]

setup(
    ext_modules=cythonize(extensions)
)

The Extension class takes many options, and a fuller explanation can be found in the setuptools documentation.

Sometimes this is not enough and you need finer customization of the setuptools Extension. To do this, you can provide a custom function create_extension to create the final Extension object after Cython has processed the sources, dependencies and # distutils directives but before the file is actually Cythonized. This function takes 2 arguments template and kwds, where template is the Extension object given as input to Cython and kwds is a dict with all keywords which should be used to create the Extension. The function create_extension must return a 2-tuple (extension, metadata), where extension is the created Extension and metadata is metadata which will be written as JSON at the top of the generated C files. This metadata is only used for debugging purposes, so you can put whatever you want in there (as long as it can be converted to JSON). The default function (defined in Cython.Build.Dependencies) is:

def default_create_extension(template, kwds):
    if 'depends' in kwds:
        include_dirs = kwds.get('include_dirs', []) + ["."]
        depends = resolve_depends(kwds['depends'], include_dirs)
        kwds['depends'] = sorted(set(depends + template.depends))

    t = template.__class__
    ext = t(**kwds)
    metadata = dict(distutils=kwds, module_name=kwds['name'])
    return ext, metadata

In case that you pass a string instead of an Extension to cythonize(), the template will be an Extension without sources. For example, if you do cythonize("*.pyx"), the template will be Extension(name="*.pyx", sources=[]).

Just as an example, this adds mylib as library to every extension:

from Cython.Build.Dependencies import default_create_extension

def my_create_extension(template, kwds):
    libs = kwds.get('libraries', []) + ["mylib"]
    kwds['libraries'] = libs
    return default_create_extension(template, kwds)

ext_modules = cythonize(..., create_extension=my_create_extension)

Note

If you Cythonize in parallel (using the nthreads argument), then the argument to create_extension must be pickleable. In particular, it cannot be a lambda function.

Cythonize arguments

The function cythonize() can take extra arguments which will allow you to customize your build.

Cython.Build.cythonize(module_list, exclude=None, nthreads=0, aliases=None, quiet=False, force=None, language=None, exclude_failures=False, show_all_warnings=False, **options)

Compile a set of source modules into C/C++ files and return a list of distutils Extension objects for them.

Parameters:
  • module_list – As module list, pass either a glob pattern, a list of glob patterns or a list of Extension objects. The latter allows you to configure the extensions separately through the normal distutils options. You can also pass Extension objects that have glob patterns as their sources. Then, cythonize will resolve the pattern and create a copy of the Extension for every matching file.

  • exclude – When passing glob patterns as module_list, you can exclude certain module names explicitly by passing them into the exclude option.

  • nthreads – The number of concurrent builds for parallel compilation (requires the multiprocessing module).

  • aliases – If you want to use compiler directives like # distutils: ... but can only know at compile time (when running the setup.py) which values to use, you can use aliases and pass a dictionary mapping those aliases to Python strings when calling cythonize(). As an example, say you want to use the compiler directive # distutils: include_dirs = ../static_libs/include/ but this path isn’t always fixed and you want to find it when running the setup.py. You can then do # distutils: include_dirs = MY_HEADERS, find the value of MY_HEADERS in the setup.py, put it in a python variable called foo as a string, and then call cythonize(..., aliases={'MY_HEADERS': foo}).

  • quiet – If True, Cython won’t print error, warning, or status messages during the compilation.

  • force – Forces the recompilation of the Cython modules, even if the timestamps don’t indicate that a recompilation is necessary.

  • language – To globally enable C++ mode, you can pass language='c++'. Otherwise, this will be determined at a per-file level based on compiler directives. This affects only modules found based on file names. Extension instances passed into cythonize() will not be changed. It is recommended to rather use the compiler directive # distutils: language = c++ than this option.

  • exclude_failures – For a broad ‘try to compile’ mode that ignores compilation failures and simply excludes the failed extensions, pass exclude_failures=True. Note that this only really makes sense for compiling .py files which can also be used without compilation.

  • show_all_warnings – By default, not all Cython warnings are printed. Set to true to show all warnings.

  • annotate – If True, will produce a HTML file for each of the .pyx or .py files compiled. The HTML file gives an indication of how much Python interaction there is in each of the source code lines, compared to plain C code. It also allows you to see the C/C++ code generated for each line of Cython code. This report is invaluable when optimizing a function for speed, and for determining when to release the GIL: in general, a nogil block may contain only “white” code. See examples in Determining where to add types or Primes.

  • annotate-fullc – If True will produce a colorized HTML version of the source which includes entire generated C/C++-code.

  • compiler_directives – Allow to set compiler directives in the setup.py like this: compiler_directives={'embedsignature': True}. See Compiler directives.

  • depfile – produce depfiles for the sources if True.

Multiple Cython Files in a Package

To automatically compile multiple Cython files without listing all of them explicitly, you can use glob patterns:

setup(
    ext_modules = cythonize("package/*.pyx")
)

You can also use glob patterns in Extension objects if you pass them through cythonize():

extensions = [Extension("*", ["*.pyx"])]

setup(
    ext_modules = cythonize(extensions)
)

Distributing Cython modules

It is strongly recommended that you distribute the generated .c files as well as your Cython sources, so that users can install your module without needing to have Cython available.

It is also recommended that Cython compilation not be enabled by default in the version you distribute. Even if the user has Cython installed, he/she probably doesn’t want to use it just to install your module. Also, the installed version may not be the same one you used, and may not compile your sources correctly.

This simply means that the setup.py file that you ship with will just be a normal setuptools file on the generated .c files, for the basic example we would have instead:

from setuptools import Extension, setup

setup(
    ext_modules = [Extension("example", ["example.c"])]
)

This is easy to combine with cythonize() by changing the file extension of the extension module sources:

from setuptools import Extension, setup

USE_CYTHON = ...   # command line option, try-import, ...

ext = '.pyx' if USE_CYTHON else '.c'

extensions = [Extension("example", ["example"+ext])]

if USE_CYTHON:
    from Cython.Build import cythonize
    extensions = cythonize(extensions)

setup(
    ext_modules = extensions
)

If you have many extensions and want to avoid the additional complexity in the declarations, you can declare them with their normal Cython sources and then call the following function instead of cythonize() to adapt the sources list in the Extensions when not using Cython:

import os.path

def no_cythonize(extensions, **_ignore):
    for extension in extensions:
        sources = []
        for sfile in extension.sources:
            path, ext = os.path.splitext(sfile)
            if ext in ('.pyx', '.py'):
                if extension.language == 'c++':
                    ext = '.cpp'
                else:
                    ext = '.c'
                sfile = path + ext
            sources.append(sfile)
        extension.sources[:] = sources
    return extensions

Another option is to make Cython a setup dependency of your system and use Cython’s build_ext module which runs cythonize as part of the build process:

setup(
    extensions = [Extension("*", ["*.pyx"])],
    cmdclass={'build_ext': Cython.Build.build_ext},
    ...
)

This depends on pip knowing that Cython is a setup dependency, by having a pyproject.toml file:

[build-system]
requires = ["setuptools", "wheel", "Cython"]

If you want to expose the C-level interface of your library for other libraries to cimport from, use package_data to install the .pxd files, e.g.:

setup(
    package_data = {
        'my_package': ['*.pxd'],
        'my_package/sub_package': ['*.pxd'],
    },
    ...
)

These .pxd files need not have corresponding .pyx modules if they contain purely declarations of external libraries.

Integrating multiple modules

In some scenarios, it can be useful to link multiple Cython modules (or other extension modules) into a single binary, e.g. when embedding Python in another application. This can be done through the inittab import mechanism of CPython.

Create a new C file to integrate the extension modules and add this macro to it:

#if PY_MAJOR_VERSION < 3
# define MODINIT(name)  init ## name
#else
# define MODINIT(name)  PyInit_ ## name
#endif

If you are only targeting Python 3.x, just use PyInit_ as prefix.

Then, for each of the modules, declare its module init function as follows, replacing some_module_name with the name of the module:

PyMODINIT_FUNC  MODINIT(some_module_name) (void);

In C++, declare them as extern C.

If you are not sure of the name of the module init function, refer to your generated module source file and look for a function name starting with PyInit_.

Next, before you start the Python runtime from your application code with Py_Initialize(), you need to initialise the modules at runtime using the PyImport_AppendInittab() C-API function, again inserting the name of each of the modules:

PyImport_AppendInittab("some_module_name", MODINIT(some_module_name));

This enables normal imports for the embedded extension modules.

In order to prevent the joined binary from exporting all of the module init functions as public symbols, Cython 0.28 and later can hide these symbols if the macro CYTHON_NO_PYINIT_EXPORT is defined while C-compiling the module C files.

Also take a look at the cython_freeze tool. It can generate the necessary boilerplate code for linking one or more modules into a single Python executable.

Compiling with pyximport

For building Cython modules during development without explicitly running setup.py after each change, you can use pyximport:

>>> import pyximport; pyximport.install()
>>> import helloworld
Hello World

This allows you to automatically run Cython on every .pyx that Python is trying to import. You should use this for simple Cython builds only where no extra C libraries and no special building setup is needed.

It is also possible to compile new .py modules that are being imported (including the standard library and installed packages). For using this feature, just tell that to pyximport:

>>> pyximport.install(pyimport=True)

In the case that Cython fails to compile a Python module, pyximport will fall back to loading the source modules instead.

Note that it is not recommended to let pyximport build code on end user side as it hooks into their import system. The best way to cater for end users is to provide pre-built binary packages in the wheel packaging format.

Arguments

The function pyximport.install() can take several arguments to influence the compilation of Cython or Python files.

pyximport.install(pyximport=True, pyimport=False, build_dir=None, build_in_temp=True, setup_args=None, reload_support=False, load_py_module_on_import_failure=False, inplace=False, language_level=None)

Main entry point for pyxinstall.

Call this to install the .pyx import hook in your meta-path for a single Python process. If you want it to be installed whenever you use Python, add it to your sitecustomize (as described above).

Parameters:
  • pyximport – If set to False, does not try to import .pyx files.

  • pyimport – You can pass pyimport=True to also install the .py import hook in your meta-path. Note, however, that it is rather experimental, will not work at all for some .py files and packages, and will heavily slow down your imports due to search and compilation. Use at your own risk.

  • build_dir – By default, compiled modules will end up in a .pyxbld directory in the user’s home directory. Passing a different path as build_dir will override this.

  • build_in_temp – If False, will produce the C files locally. Working with complex dependencies and debugging becomes more easy. This can principally interfere with existing files of the same name.

  • setup_args – Dict of arguments for Distribution. See distutils.core.setup().

  • reload_support – Enables support for dynamic reload(my_module), e.g. after a change in the Cython code. Additional files <so_path>.reloadNN may arise on that account, when the previously loaded module file cannot be overwritten.

  • load_py_module_on_import_failure – If the compilation of a .py file succeeds, but the subsequent import fails for some reason, retry the import with the normal .py module instead of the compiled module. Note that this may lead to unpredictable results for modules that change the system state during their import, as the second import will rerun these modifications in whatever state the system was left after the import of the compiled module failed.

  • inplace – Install the compiled module (.so for Linux and Mac / .pyd for Windows) next to the source file.

  • language_level – The source language level to use: 2 or 3. The default is to use the language level of the current Python runtime for .py files and Py2 for .pyx files.

Dependency Handling

Since pyximport does not use cythonize() internally, it currently requires a different setup for dependencies. It is possible to declare that your module depends on multiple files, (likely .h and .pxd files). If your Cython module is named foo and thus has the filename foo.pyx then you should create another file in the same directory called foo.pyxdep. The modname.pyxdep file can be a list of filenames or “globs” (like *.pxd or include/*.h). Each filename or glob must be on a separate line. Pyximport will check the file date for each of those files before deciding whether to rebuild the module. In order to keep track of the fact that the dependency has been handled, Pyximport updates the modification time of your “.pyx” source file. Future versions may do something more sophisticated like informing setuptools of the dependencies directly.

Limitations

pyximport does not use cythonize(). Thus it is not possible to do things like using compiler directives at the top of Cython files or compiling Cython code to C++.

Pyximport does not give you any control over how your Cython file is compiled. Usually the defaults are fine. You might run into problems if you wanted to write your program in half-C, half-Cython and build them into a single library.

Pyximport does not hide the setuptools/GCC warnings and errors generated by the import process. Arguably this will give you better feedback if something went wrong and why. And if nothing went wrong it will give you the warm fuzzy feeling that pyximport really did rebuild your module as it was supposed to.

Basic module reloading support is available with the option reload_support=True. Note that this will generate a new module filename for each build and thus end up loading multiple shared libraries into memory over time. CPython has limited support for reloading shared libraries as such, see PEP 489.

Pyximport puts both your .c file and the platform-specific binary into a separate build directory, usually $HOME/.pyxblx/. To copy it back into the package hierarchy (usually next to the source file) for manual reuse, you can pass the option inplace=True.

Compiling with cython.inline

One can also compile Cython in a fashion similar to SciPy’s weave.inline. For example:

>>> import cython
>>> def f(a):
...     ret = cython.inline("return a+b", b=3)
...

Unbound variables are automatically pulled from the surrounding local and global scopes, and the result of the compilation is cached for efficient reuse.

Compiling with cython.compile

Cython supports transparent compiling of the cython code in a function using the @cython.compile decorator:

@cython.compile
def plus(a, b):
    return a + b

Parameters of the decorated function cannot have type declarations. Their types are automatically determined from values passed to the function, thus leading to one or more specialised compiled functions for the respective argument types. Executing example:

import cython

@cython.compile
def plus(a, b):
    return a + b

print(plus('3', '5'))
print(plus(3, 5))

will produce following output:

35
8

Compiling with Sage

The Sage notebook allows transparently editing and compiling Cython code simply by typing %cython at the top of a cell and evaluate it. Variables and functions defined in a Cython cell are imported into the running session. Please check Sage documentation for details.

You can tailor the behavior of the Cython compiler by specifying the directives below.

Compiling with a Jupyter Notebook

It’s possible to compile code in a notebook cell with Cython. For this you need to load the Cython magic:

%load_ext cython

Then you can define a Cython cell by writing %%cython on top of it. Like this:

%%cython

cdef int a = 0
for i in range(10):
    a += i
print(a)

Note that each cell will be compiled into a separate extension module. So if you use a package in a Cython cell, you will have to import this package in the same cell. It’s not enough to have imported the package in a previous cell. Cython will tell you that there are “undefined global names” at compilation time if you don’t comply.

The global names (top level functions, classes, variables and modules) of the cell are then loaded into the global namespace of the notebook. So in the end, it behaves as if you executed a Python cell.

Additional allowable arguments to the Cython magic are listed below. You can see them also by typing `%%cython? in IPython or a Jupyter notebook.

-a, –annotate

Produce a colorized HTML version of the source.

–annotate-fullc

Produce a colorized HTML version of the source which includes entire generated C/C++-code.

-+, –cplus

Output a C++ rather than C file.

-f, –force

Force the compilation of a new module, even if the source has been previously compiled.

-3

Select Python 3 syntax

-2

Select Python 2 syntax

-c=COMPILE_ARGS, –compile-args=COMPILE_ARGS

Extra flags to pass to compiler via the extra_compile_args.

–link-args LINK_ARGS

Extra flags to pass to linker via the extra_link_args.

-l LIB, –lib LIB

Add a library to link the extension against (can be specified multiple times).

-L dir

Add a path to the list of library directories (can be specified multiple times).

-I INCLUDE, –include INCLUDE

Add a path to the list of include directories (can be specified multiple times).

-S, –src

Add a path to the list of src files (can be specified multiple times).

-n NAME, –name NAME

Specify a name for the Cython module.

–pgo

Enable profile guided optimisation in the C compiler. Compiles the cell twice and executes it in between to generate a runtime profile.

–verbose

Print debug information like generated .c/.cpp file location and exact gcc/g++ command invoked.

Compiler options

Compiler options can be set in the setup.py, before calling cythonize(), like this:

from setuptools import setup

from Cython.Build import cythonize
from Cython.Compiler import Options

Options.docstrings = False

setup(
    name = "hello",
    ext_modules = cythonize("lib.pyx"),
)

Here are the options that are available:

Cython.Compiler.Options.docstrings = True

Whether or not to include docstring in the Python extension. If False, the binary size will be smaller, but the __doc__ attribute of any class or function will be an empty string.

Cython.Compiler.Options.embed_pos_in_docstring = False

Embed the source code position in the docstrings of functions and classes.

Cython.Compiler.Options.generate_cleanup_code = False

Decref global variables in each module on exit for garbage collection. 0: None, 1+: interned objects, 2+: cdef globals, 3+: types objects Mostly for reducing noise in Valgrind as it typically executes at process exit (when all memory will be reclaimed anyways). Note that directly or indirectly executed cleanup code that makes use of global variables or types may no longer be safe when enabling the respective level since there is no guaranteed order in which the (reference counted) objects will be cleaned up. The order can change due to live references and reference cycles.

Cython.Compiler.Options.clear_to_none = True

Should tp_clear() set object fields to None instead of clearing them to NULL?

Cython.Compiler.Options.annotate = False

Generate an annotated HTML version of the input source files for debugging and optimisation purposes. This has the same effect as the annotate argument in cythonize().

Cython.Compiler.Options.fast_fail = False

This will abort the compilation on the first error occurred rather than trying to keep going and printing further error messages.

Cython.Compiler.Options.warning_errors = False

Turn all warnings into errors.

Cython.Compiler.Options.error_on_unknown_names = True

Make unknown names an error. Python raises a NameError when encountering unknown names at runtime, whereas this option makes them a compile time error. If you want full Python compatibility, you should disable this option and also ‘cache_builtins’.

Cython.Compiler.Options.error_on_uninitialized = True

Make uninitialized local variable reference a compile time error. Python raises UnboundLocalError at runtime, whereas this option makes them a compile time error. Note that this option affects only variables of “python object” type.

Cython.Compiler.Options.convert_range = True

This will convert statements of the form for i in range(...) to for i from ... when i is a C integer type, and the direction (i.e. sign of step) can be determined. WARNING: This may change the semantics if the range causes assignment to i to overflow. Specifically, if this option is set, an error will be raised before the loop is entered, whereas without this option the loop will execute until an overflowing value is encountered.

Cython.Compiler.Options.cache_builtins = True

Perform lookups on builtin names only once, at module initialisation time. This will prevent the module from getting imported if a builtin name that it uses cannot be found during initialisation. Default is True. Note that some legacy builtins are automatically remapped from their Python 2 names to their Python 3 names by Cython when building in Python 3.x, so that they do not get in the way even if this option is enabled.

Cython.Compiler.Options.gcc_branch_hints = True

Generate branch prediction hints to speed up error handling etc.

Cython.Compiler.Options.lookup_module_cpdef = False

Enable this to allow one to write your_module.foo = ... to overwrite the definition if the cpdef function foo, at the cost of an extra dictionary lookup on every call. If this is false it generates only the Python wrapper and no override check.

Cython.Compiler.Options.embed = None

Whether or not to embed the Python interpreter, for use in making a standalone executable or calling from external libraries. This will provide a C function which initialises the interpreter and executes the body of this module. See this demo for a concrete example. If true, the initialisation function is the C main() function, but this option can also be set to a non-empty string to provide a function name explicitly. Default is False.

Cython.Compiler.Options.cimport_from_pyx = False

Allows cimporting from a pyx file without a pxd file.

Cython.Compiler.Options.buffer_max_dims = 8

Maximum number of dimensions for buffers – set lower than number of dimensions in numpy, as slices are passed by value and involve a lot of copying.

Cython.Compiler.Options.closure_freelist_size = 8

Number of function closure instances to keep in a freelist (0: no freelists)

Compiler directives

Compiler directives are instructions which affect the behavior of Cython code. Here is the list of currently supported directives:

binding (True / False)

Controls whether free functions behave more like Python’s CFunctions (e.g. len()) or, when set to True, more like Python’s functions. When enabled, functions will bind to an instance when looked up as a class attribute (hence the name) and will emulate the attributes of Python functions, including introspections like argument names and annotations.

Default is True.

Changed in version 3.0.0: Default changed from False to True

boundscheck (True / False)

If set to False, Cython is free to assume that indexing operations ([]-operator) in the code will not cause any IndexErrors to be raised. Lists, tuples, and strings are affected only if the index can be determined to be non-negative (or if wraparound is False). Conditions which would normally trigger an IndexError may instead cause segfaults or data corruption if this is set to False. Default is True.

wraparound (True / False)

In Python, arrays and sequences can be indexed relative to the end. For example, A[-1] indexes the last value of a list. In C, negative indexing is not supported. If set to False, Cython is allowed to neither check for nor correctly handle negative indices, possibly causing segfaults or data corruption. If bounds checks are enabled (the default, see boundschecks above), negative indexing will usually raise an IndexError for indices that Cython evaluates itself. However, these cases can be difficult to recognise in user code to distinguish them from indexing or slicing that is evaluated by the underlying Python array or sequence object and thus continues to support wrap-around indices. It is therefore safest to apply this option only to code that does not process negative indices at all. Default is True.

initializedcheck (True / False)
If set to True, Cython checks that
  • a memoryview is initialized whenever its elements are accessed or assigned to.

  • a C++ class is initialized when it is accessed (only when cpp_locals is on)

Setting this to False disables these checks. Default is True.

nonecheck (True / False)

If set to False, Cython is free to assume that native field accesses on variables typed as an extension type, or buffer accesses on a buffer variable, never occurs when the variable is set to None. Otherwise a check is inserted and the appropriate exception is raised. This is off by default for performance reasons. Default is False.

overflowcheck (True / False)

If set to True, raise errors on overflowing C integer arithmetic operations. Incurs a modest runtime penalty, but is much faster than using Python ints. Default is False.

overflowcheck.fold (True / False)

If set to True, and overflowcheck is True, check the overflow bit for nested, side-effect-free arithmetic expressions once rather than at every step. Depending on the compiler, architecture, and optimization settings, this may help or hurt performance. A simple suite of benchmarks can be found in Demos/overflow_perf.pyx. Default is True.

embedsignature (True / False)

If set to True, Cython will embed a textual copy of the call signature in the docstring of all Python visible functions and classes. Tools like IPython and epydoc can thus display the signature, which cannot otherwise be retrieved after compilation. Default is False.

embedsignature.format (c / python / clinic)

If set to c, Cython will generate signatures preserving C type declarations and Python type annotations. If set to python, Cython will do a best attempt to use pure-Python type annotations in embedded signatures. For arguments without Python type annotations, the C type is mapped to the closest Python type equivalent (e.g., C short is mapped to Python int type and C double is mapped to Python float type). The specific output and type mapping are experimental and may change over time. The clinic format generates signatures that are compatible with those understood by CPython’s Argument Clinic tool. The CPython runtime strips these signatures from docstrings and translates them into a __text_signature__ attribute. This is mainly useful when using binding=False, since the Cython functions generated with binding=True do not have (nor need) a __text_signature__ attribute. Default is c.

cdivision (True / False)

If set to False, Cython will adjust the remainder and quotient operators C types to match those of Python ints (which differ when the operands have opposite signs) and raise a ZeroDivisionError when the right operand is 0. This has up to a 35% speed penalty. If set to True, no checks are performed. See CEP 516. Default is False.

cdivision_warnings (True / False)

If set to True, Cython will emit a runtime warning whenever division is performed with negative operands. See CEP 516. Default is False.

cpow (True / False)

cpow modifies the return type of a**b, as shown in the table below:

cpow behaviour

Type of a

Type of b

cpow==True

cpow==False

C integer

Negative integer compile-time constant

Return type is C double

Return type is C double (special case)

C integer

C integer (known to be >= 0 at compile time)

Return type is integer

Return type is integer

C integer

C integer (may be negative)

Return type is integer

Return type is C double (note that Python would dynamically pick int or float here, while Cython doesn’t)

C floating point

C integer

Return type is floating point

Return type is floating point

C floating point (or C integer)

C floating point

Return type is floating point, result is NaN if the result would be complex

Either a C real or complex number at cost of some speed

The cpow==True behaviour largely keeps the result type the same as the operand types, while the cpow==False behaviour follows Python and returns a flexible type depending on the inputs.

Introduced in Cython 3.0 with a default of False; before that, the behaviour matched the cpow=True version.

always_allow_keywords (True / False)

When disabled, uses the METH_NOARGS and METH_O signatures when constructing functions/methods which take zero or one arguments. Has no effect on special methods and functions with more than one argument. The METH_NOARGS and METH_O signatures provide slightly faster calling conventions but disallow the use of keywords.

c_api_binop_methods (True / False)

When enabled, makes the special binary operator methods (__add__, etc.) behave according to the low-level C-API slot semantics, i.e. only a single method implements both the normal and reversed operator. This used to be the default in Cython 0.x and was now replaced by Python semantics, i.e. the default in Cython 3.x and later is False.

profile (True / False)

Write hooks for Python profilers into the compiled C code. Default is False.

linetrace (True / False)

Write line tracing hooks for Python profilers or coverage reporting into the compiled C code. This also enables profiling. Default is False. Note that the generated module will not actually use line tracing, unless you additionally pass the C macro definition CYTHON_TRACE=1 to the C compiler (e.g. using the setuptools option define_macros). Define CYTHON_TRACE_NOGIL=1 to also include nogil functions and sections.

infer_types (True / False)

Infer types of untyped variables in function bodies. Default is None, indicating that only safe (semantically-unchanging) inferences are allowed. In particular, inferring integral types for variables used in arithmetic expressions is considered unsafe (due to possible overflow) and must be explicitly requested.

language_level (2/3/3str)

Globally set the Python language level to be used for module compilation. Default is compatibility with Python 3 in Cython 3.x and with Python 2 in Cython 0.x. To enable Python 3 source code semantics, set this to 3 (or 3str) at the start of a module or pass the “-3” or “–3str” command line options to the compiler. For Python 2 semantics, use 2 and “-2” accordingly. The 3str option enables Python 3 semantics but does not change the str type and unprefixed string literals to unicode when the compiled code runs in Python 2.x. Language level 2 ignores x: int type annotations due to the int/long ambiguity. Note that cimported files inherit this setting from the module being compiled, unless they explicitly set their own language level. Included source files always inherit this setting.

c_string_type (bytes / str / unicode)

Globally set the type of an implicit coercion from char* or std::string.

c_string_encoding (ascii, default, utf-8, etc.)

Globally set the encoding to use when implicitly coercing char* or std:string to a unicode object. Coercion from a unicode object to C type is only allowed when set to ascii or default, the latter being utf-8 in Python 3 and nearly-always ascii in Python 2.

type_version_tag (True / False)

Enables the attribute cache for extension types in CPython by setting the type flag Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_VERSION_TAG. Default is True, meaning that the cache is enabled for Cython implemented types. To disable it explicitly in the rare cases where a type needs to juggle with its tp_dict internally without paying attention to cache consistency, this option can be set to False.

unraisable_tracebacks (True / False)

Whether to print tracebacks when suppressing unraisable exceptions.

iterable_coroutine (True / False)

PEP 492 specifies that async-def coroutines must not be iterable, in order to prevent accidental misuse in non-async contexts. However, this makes it difficult and inefficient to write backwards compatible code that uses async-def coroutines in Cython but needs to interact with async Python code that uses the older yield-from syntax, such as asyncio before Python 3.5. This directive can be applied in modules or selectively as decorator on an async-def coroutine to make the affected coroutine(s) iterable and thus directly interoperable with yield-from.

annotation_typing (True / False)

Uses function argument annotations to determine the type of variables. Default is True, but can be disabled. Since Python does not enforce types given in annotations, setting to False gives greater compatibility with Python code. From Cython 3.0, annotation_typing can be set on a per-function or per-class basis.

emit_code_comments (True / False)

Copy the original source code line by line into C code comments in the generated code file to help with understanding the output. This is also required for coverage analysis.

cpp_locals (True / False)

Make C++ variables behave more like Python variables by allowing them to be “unbound” instead of always default-constructing them at the start of a function. See cpp_locals directive for more detail.

legacy_implicit_noexcept (True / False)

When enabled, cdef functions will not propagate raised exceptions by default. Hence, the function will behave in the same way as if declared with noexcept keyword. See Error return values for details. Setting this directive to True will cause Cython 3.0 to have the same semantics as Cython 0.x. This directive was solely added to help migrate legacy code written before Cython 3. It will be removed in a future release.

Configurable optimisations

optimize.use_switch (True / False)

Whether to expand chained if-else statements (including statements like if x == 1 or x == 2:) into C switch statements. This can have performance benefits if there are lots of values but cause compiler errors if there are any duplicate values (which may not be detectable at Cython compile time for all C constants). Default is True.

optimize.unpack_method_calls (True / False)

Cython can generate code that optimistically checks for Python method objects at call time and unpacks the underlying function to call it directly. This can substantially speed up method calls, especially for builtins, but may also have a slight negative performance impact in some cases where the guess goes completely wrong. Disabling this option can also reduce the code size. Default is True.

Warnings

All warning directives take True / False as options to turn the warning on / off.

warn.undeclared (default False)

Warns about any variables that are implicitly declared without a cdef declaration

warn.unreachable (default True)

Warns about code paths that are statically determined to be unreachable, e.g. returning twice unconditionally.

warn.maybe_uninitialized (default False)

Warns about use of variables that are conditionally uninitialized.

warn.unused (default False)

Warns about unused variables and declarations

warn.unused_arg (default False)

Warns about unused function arguments

warn.unused_result (default False)

Warns about unused assignment to the same name, such as r = 2; r = 1 + 2

warn.multiple_declarators (default True)

Warns about multiple variables declared on the same line with at least one pointer type. For example cdef double* a, b - which, as in C, declares a as a pointer, b as a value type, but could be mininterpreted as declaring two pointers.

show_performance_hints (default True)

Show performance hints during compilation pointing to places in the code which can yield performance degradation. Note that performance hints are not warnings and hence the directives starting with warn. above do not affect them and they will not trigger a failure when “error on warnings” is enabled.

How to set directives

Globally

One can set compiler directives through a special header comment near the top of the file, like this:

# cython: language_level=3, boundscheck=False

The comment must appear before any code (but can appear after other comments or whitespace).

One can also pass a directive on the command line by using the -X switch:

$ cython -X boundscheck=True ...

Directives passed on the command line will override directives set in header comments.

Locally

For local blocks, you need to cimport the special builtin cython module:

#!python
cimport cython

Then you can use the directives either as decorators or in a with statement, like this:

#!python
@cython.boundscheck(False) # turn off boundscheck for this function
def f():
    ...
    # turn it temporarily on again for this block
    with cython.boundscheck(True):
        ...

Warning

These two methods of setting directives are not affected by overriding the directive on the command-line using the -X option.

In setup.py

Compiler directives can also be set in the setup.py file by passing a keyword argument to cythonize:

from setuptools import setup
from Cython.Build import cythonize

setup(
    name="My hello app",
    ext_modules=cythonize('hello.pyx', compiler_directives={'embedsignature': True}),
)

This will override the default directives as specified in the compiler_directives dictionary. Note that explicit per-file or local directives as explained above take precedence over the values passed to cythonize.

C line numbers in tracebacks

To provide more detailed debug information, Python tracebacks of Cython modules show the C line where the exception originated (or was propagated). This feature is not entirely for free and can visibly increase the C compile time as well as adding 0-5% to the size of the binary extension module. It is therefore disabled in Cython 3.1 and can be controlled using C macros.

  • CYTHON_CLINE_IN_TRACEBACK=1 always shows the C line number in tracebacks,

  • CYTHON_CLINE_IN_TRACEBACK=0 never shows the C line number in tracebacks,

Unless the feature is disabled completely with this macro, there is also support for enabling and disabling the feature at runtime, at the before mentioned cost of longer C compile times and larger extension modules. This can be configured with the C macro

CYTHON_CLINE_IN_TRACEBACK_RUNTIME=1

To then change the behaviour at runtime, you can import the special module cython_runtime after loading a Cython module and set the attribute cline_in_traceback in that module to either true or false to control the behaviour as your Cython code is being run:

import cython_runtime
cython_runtime.cline_in_traceback = True

raise ValueError(5)

If both macros are not defined by the build setup or CFLAGS, the feature is disabled.

In Cython 3.0 and earlier, the Cython compiler option c_line_in_traceback (passed as an argument to cythonize in setup.py) or the command line argument --no-c-in-traceback could also be used to disable this feature. From Cython 3.1, this is still possible, but should be migrated to using the C macros instead. Before Cython 3.1, the CYTHON_CLINE_IN_TRACEBACK macro already works as described but the Cython option is needed to remove the compile-time cost.

C macro defines

Cython has a number of C macros that can be used to control compilation. Typically, these would be set using extra_compile_args in setup.py (for example extra_compile_args=['-DCYTHON_USE_TYPE_SPECS=1']), however they can also be set in other ways like using the CFLAGS environmental variable.

These macros are set automatically by Cython to sensible default values unless you chose to explicitly override them, so they are a tool that most users can happily ignore. Not all combinations of macros are compatible or tested, and some change the default value of other macros. They are listed below in rough order from most important to least important:

CYTHON_LIMITED_API

Turns on Cython’s experimental Limited API support, meaning that one compiled module can be used by many Python interpreter versions (at the cost of some performance). At this stage many features do not work in the Limited API. If you use this macro you should also set the macro Py_LIMITED_API to be the version hex for the minimum Python version you want to support (>=3.7). 0x03070000 will support Python 3.7 upwards.

CYTHON_PEP489_MULTI_PHASE_INIT

Uses multi-phase module initialization as described in PEP489. This improves Python compatibility, especially when running the initial import of the code when it makes attributes such as __file__ available. It is therefore on by default where supported.

CYTHON_USE_MODULE_STATE

Stores module data on a struct associated with the module object rather than as C global variables. The advantage is that it should be possible to import the same module more than once (e.g. in different sub-interpreters). At the moment this is experimental and not all data has been moved. It also requires that CYTHON_PEP489_MULTI_PHASE_INIT is off - we plan to remove this limitation in the future.

CYTHON_USE_TYPE_SPECS

Defines cdef classes as “heap types” rather than “static types”. Practically this does not change a lot from a user point of view, but it is needed to implement Limited API support.

CYTHON_EXTERN_C

Slightly different to the other macros, this controls how cdef public functions appear to C++ code. See C++ public declarations for full details.

CYTHON_CLINE_IN_TRACEBACK

Controls whether C lines numbers appear in tracebacks. See C line numbers in tracebacks for a complete description.

There is a further list of macros which turn off various optimizations or language features. Under normal circumstance Cython enables these automatically based on the version of Python you are compiling for so there is no need to use them to try to enable extra optimizations - all supported optimizations are enabled by default. These are mostly relevant if you’re tying to get Cython working in a new and unsupported Python interpreter where you will typically want to set them to 0 to disable optimizations. They are listed below for completeness but hidden by default since most users will be uninterested in changing them.