I’m trying to call a c function from my extension and have narrowed the problem down to this test case.
#import "Python.h"
...
// Called from python with test_method(0, 0, 'TEST')
static PyObject*
test_method(PyObject *args)
{
int ok, x, y, size;
const char *s;
// this causes Segmentation fault
//ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "iis#", &x, &y, &s, &size);
// also segfaults
//if(ok) PyErr_SetString(PyExc_SystemError, 'Exception');
// this does not cause segfault but fills the variables with garbage
ok = PyArg_ParseTuple(&args, "iis#", &x, &y, &s, &size);
// Example: >test_method 0, 37567920, (garbage)
printf(">test_method %d, %d, %s\n", x, y, s);
/* Success */
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
static PyMethodDef testMethods[] =
{
{"test_method", test_method, METH_VARARGS,
"test_method"},
...
{NULL, NULL, 0, NULL}
};
Any ideas what I might be doing wrong. (Python version 2.6.4).
Hmmm. I think the signature of your method should be this:
If you are invoking your
test_methodas a bound method (i.e. a method of some object instance),selfwill be the object itself. Iftest_methodis a module function,selfis the pointer passed toPy_InitModule4()when you initialized the module (or NULL if you usedPy_InitModule()). The thing is that Python makes no distinctions between bound instance methods and ordinary functions at the code level, that’s why you have to passselfeven if you are implementing a plain function.See this page for more details.