A setuptools extension for building cpython extensions written in golang.
This requires golang >= 1.5.
This requires python >= 3.7. It is currently tested against python3 and pypy3.
- linux
- macOS
- win32
Add setuptools-golang
to the setup_requires
in your setup.py and
build_golang={'root': ...}
. root
refers to the root go import path of
your project.
By default, setuptools-golang
will strip all binaries. This can be disabled
by adding 'strip': False
to build_golang
. This will increase the size of
the extension, but the binaries contain debugging information and symbols.
An extension must be a single file in the main
go package (though the entire
main
package will be built into the extension). That package may import
other code.
You may have multiple extensions in your setup.py
.
setup(
...
build_golang={'root': 'github.com/user/project'},
ext_modules=[Extension('example', ['example.go'])],
setup_requires=['setuptools-golang'],
...
)
Here's some examples
Extension
by default will bring along the go files listed, but won't bring
along the related C files. Add the following to MANIFEST.in
:
global-include *.c
global-include *.go
You're probably trying to import from an external source which does not exist. Double check that your import is correct.
package github.com/a/b/c: /tmp/.../github.com/a/b exists but /tmp/.../github.com/a/b/.git does not - stale checkout?
You've probably mistyped an import. Double check that your import is correct.
For example:
# github.com/asottile/dockerfile/pylib
duplicate symbol _PyDockerfile_GoParseError in:
$WORK/github.com/asottile/dockerfile/pylib/_obj/_cgo_export.o
$WORK/github.com/asottile/dockerfile/pylib/_obj/main.cgo2.o
Make sure to mark global variables defined in C as extern
.
Here's an example PR
setuptools-golang attempts to make builds more repeatable by using a separate
GOPATH
-- if you'd like to reuse a GOPATH you can set the
SETUPTOOLS_GOLANG_GOPATH
environment variable:
$ SETUPTOOLS_GOLANG_GOPATH=~/go pip install .
...
setuptools-golang
also provides a tool for building
PEP 513 manylinux1 wheels so your
consumers don't need to have a go compiler installed to use your library.
Simply run setuptools-golang-build-manylinux-wheels
from your source
directory. The resulting wheels will end up in ./dist
.
$ setuptools-golang-build-manylinux-wheels
...
+ ls /dist -al
total 8092
drwxrwxr-x 2 1000 1000 4096 Feb 1 04:16 .
drwxr-xr-x 41 root root 4096 Feb 1 04:15 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 1000 1000 2063299 Feb 1 04:16 setuptools_golang_examples-0.1.1-cp34-cp34m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
-rw-r--r-- 1 1000 1000 2064862 Feb 1 04:16 setuptools_golang_examples-0.1.1-cp35-cp35m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
-rw-r--r-- 1 1000 1000 2064873 Feb 1 04:16 setuptools_golang_examples-0.1.1-cp36-cp36m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
-rw-rw-r-- 1 1000 1000 4273 Feb 1 04:14 setuptools-golang-examples-0.1.1.tar.gz
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Your wheels have been built into ./dist
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