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Python ctypes-based bindings for libvlc

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This file documents the bindings generator, not the bindings themselves. For the bindings documentation, see the README.module file.

The bindings generator generates ctypes-bindings from the include files defining the public API. The same generated module should be compatible with various versions of libvlc 2.* and 3.*. However, there may be incompatible changes between major versions. Versioned bindings for 2.2 and 3.0 are provided in the repository.

License

The module generator is licensed under the GNU General Public License version 2 or later. The generated module is licensed, like libvlc, under the GNU Lesser General Public License 2.1 or later.

Development

You can get the latest version of the code generator from https://github.com/oaubert/python-vlc/ or https://git.videolan.org/?p=vlc/bindings/python.git.

The code expects to be placed inside a VLC source tree, in vlc/bindings/python, so that it finds the development include files, or to find the installed include files in /usr/include (on Debian, install libvlc-dev).

Once you have cloned the project, you can run

python3 dev_setup.sh

from the root directory (or the python version if on a platform without shell)

This script will install everything that is needed (submodules, virtual environment, treesitter, packages, etc.) for you to generate the bindings. Then, activate the virtual environment:

See https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html#how-venvs-work for other os-shell combinations.

To generate the vlc.py module and its documentation, for both the development version and the installed VLC version, use make.

The Makefile tries to convert files from either ../../include/vlc (i.e. if the code is placed as a bindings/pyton in the VLC source tree) or /usr/include/vlc.

For running tests, use make test. Note that you need vlc installed because some tests require the libvlc's dynamic library to be present on the system.

If you want to generate the bindings from an installed version of the VLC includes (which are expected to be in /usr/include/vlc), use the 'installed' target: make installed.

See more recipes in the Makefile.

To install python-vlc for development purposes (add a symlink to your Python library) simply do

python setup.py develop

preferably inside a virtualenv. You can uninstall it later with

python setup.py develop --uninstall

Documentation building needs sphinx. An online build is available at https://python-vlc.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

Packaging

The generated module version number is built from the VLC version number and the generator version number:

vlc_major.vlc_minor.(1000 * vlc_micro + 100 * generator_major + generator_minor)

so that it shared it major.minor with the corresponding VLC.

To generate the reference PyPI module (including setup.py, examples and metadata files), use

make dist

Architecture

First of all, the bindings generator is in generator/generate.py.

It really is the conjunction of two things:

  1. A parser of C header files (those of libvlc): that is the class Parser.
  2. A generator of Python bindings: that is the class PythonGenerator.

Parser parses libvlc's headers and produces a kind of AST where nodes are instances of either Struct, Union, Func, Par, Enum or Val. The information kept is what is necessary for PythonGenerator to then produce the bindings.

Until version 2 of the bindings generator, parsing was regex-based. It worked pretty well thanks to the consistent coding style of libvlc. However, it remained rather fragile.

Since version 2, parsing is done using Tree-sitter. More specifically, we use the C Tree-sitter grammar and Tree-sitter's Python bindings. It offers a more complete and robust parsing of C code. The job of Parser is thus to transform the AST1 produced by Tree-sitter into an "AST" understandable by the generator.

LibVLC Discord

Join the chat at https://discord.gg/3h3K3JF

python-vlc is part of the LibVLC Discord Community server. Feel free to come say hi!

How to contribute

Contributions such as:

are welcome!

Footnotes

  1. To be exact, it produces a CST: Concrete Syntax Tree.