An example pybind11 module built with a CMake-based build system. This is useful for C++ codebases that have an existing CMake project structure.
On Unix (Linux, OS X)
- A compiler with C++11 support
- CMake >= 2.8.12
On Windows
- Visual Studio 2015 (required for all Python versions, see notes below)
- CMake >= 3.1
Just clone this repository and pip install. Note the --recursive
option which is
needed for the pybind11 submodule:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/pybind/cmake_example.git
pip install ./cmake_example
With the setup.py
file included in this example, the pip install
command will
invoke CMake and build the pybind11 module as specified in CMakeLists.txt
.
Compiler requirements
Pybind11 requires a C++11 compliant compiler, i.e Visual Studio 2015 on Windows. This applies to all Python versions, including 2.7. Unlike regular C extension modules, it's perfectly fine to compile a pybind11 module with a VS version newer than the target Python's VS version. See the FAQ for more details.
Runtime requirements
The Visual C++ 2015 redistributable packages are a runtime requirement for this
project. It can be found here. If you use the Anaconda Python
distribution, you can add vs2015_runtime
as a platform-dependent runtime
requirement for you package: see the conda.recipe/meta.yaml
file in this example.
Documentation for the example project is generated using Sphinx. Sphinx has the ability to automatically inspect the signatures and documentation strings in the extension module to generate beautiful documentation in a variety formats. The following command generates HTML-based reference documentation; for other formats please refer to the Sphinx manual:
cd cmake_example/docs
make html
Pybind11 is provided under a BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file. By using, distributing, or contributing to this project, you agree to the terms and conditions of this license.
import cmake_example
cmake_example.add(1, 2)