Preliminary documentation for Ice for MATLAB. Do not use in production applications. Refer to the space directory for other releases.

The Python mapping supports two forms of code generation: dynamic and static.

On this page:

Dynamic Code Generation in Python

Using dynamic code generation, Slice files are "loaded" at run time and dynamically translated into Python code, which is immediately compiled and available for use by the application. This is accomplished using the Ice.loadSlice function, as shown in the following example:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("Color.ice")
import M

print("My favorite color is " + str(M.Color.blue))

For this example, we assume that Color.ice contains the following definitions:

Slice
module M
{
    enum Color { red, green, blue }
}

The code imports module M after the Slice file is loaded because module M is not defined until the Slice definitions have been translated into Python.

Ice.loadSlice Options in Python

The Ice.loadSlice function behaves like a Slice compiler in that it accepts command-line arguments for specifying preprocessor options and controlling code generation. The arguments must include at least one Slice file.

The function has the following Python definition:

Python
def Ice.loadSlice(cmd, args=[])

The command-line arguments can be specified entirely in the first argument, cmd, which must be a string. The optional second argument can be used to pass additional command-line arguments as a list; this is useful when the caller already has the arguments in list form. The function always returns None.

For example, the following calls to Ice.loadSlice are functionally equivalent:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("-I/opt/IcePy/slice Color.ice")
Ice.loadSlice("-I/opt/IcePy/slice", ["Color.ice"])
Ice.loadSlice("", ["-I/opt/IcePy/slice", "Color.ice"])

In addition to the standard compiler optionsIce.loadSlice also supports the following command-line options:

  • --all
    Generate code for all Slice definitions, including those from included files.
  • --checksum
    Generate checksums for Slice definitions.

 

Locating Slice Files in Python

If your Slice files depend on Ice types, you can avoid hard-coding the path name of your Ice installation directory by calling the Ice.getSliceDir function:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("-I" + Ice.getSliceDir() + " Color.ice")

This function attempts to locate the slice subdirectory of your Ice installation using an algorithm that succeeds for the following scenarios:

  • Installation of a binary Ice archive
  • Installation of an Ice source distribution using make install
  • Installation via a Windows installer
  • Package installation on Linux (DEB/RPM)
  • Execution inside a compiled Ice source distribution

If the slice subdirectory can be found, getSliceDir returns its absolute path name, otherwise the function returns None.

Loading Multiple Slice Files in Python

You can specify as many Slice files as necessary in a single invocation of Ice.loadSlice, as shown below:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("Syscall.ice Process.ice")

Alternatively, you can call Ice.loadSlice several times:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("Syscall.ice")
Ice.loadSlice("Process.ice")

If a Slice file includes another file, the default behavior of Ice.loadSlice generates Python code only for the named file. For example, suppose Syscall.ice includes Process.ice as follows:

Slice
// Syscall.ice
#include <Process.ice>
...

If you call Ice.loadSlice("-I. Syscall.ice"), Python code is not generated for the Slice definitions in Process.ice or for any definitions that may be included by Process.ice. If you also need code to be generated for included files, one solution is to load them individually in subsequent calls to Ice.loadSlice. However, it is much simpler, not to mention more efficient, to use the --all option instead:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("--all -I. Syscall.ice")

When you specify --allIce.loadSlice generates Python code for all Slice definitions included directly or indirectly from the named Slice files.

There is no harm in loading a Slice file multiple times, aside from the additional overhead associated with code generation. For example, this situation could arise when you need to load multiple top-level Slice files that happen to include a common subset of nested files. Suppose that we need to load both Syscall.ice and Kernel.ice, both of which include Process.ice. The simplest way to load both files is with a single call to Ice.loadSlice:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("--all -I. Syscall.ice Kernel.ice")

Although this invocation causes the Ice extension to generate code twice for Process.ice, the generated code is structured so that the interpreter ignores duplicate definitions. We could have avoided generating unnecessary code with the following sequence of steps:

Python
Ice.loadSlice("--all -I. Syscall.ice")
Ice.loadSlice("-I. Kernel.ice")

In more complex cases, however, it can be difficult or impossible to completely avoid this situation, and the overhead of code generation is usually not significant enough to justify such an effort.

Static Code Generation in Python

You should be familiar with static code generation if you have used other Slice language mappings, such as C++ or Java. Using static code generation, the Slice compiler slice2py generates Python code from your Slice definitions.

Compiler Output in Python

For each Slice file X.iceslice2py generates Python code into a file named X_ice.py.

Using the file name X.py would create problems if X.ice defined a module named X, therefore the suffix _ice is appended to the name of the generated file to prevent name collisions.

The default output directory is the current working directory, but a different directory can be specified using the --output-dir option. You can further customize the location of generated files using metadata.

In addition to the generated file, slice2py creates a Python package for each Slice module it encounters. A Python package is nothing more than a subdirectory that contains a file with a special name (__init__.py). This file is executed automatically by Python when a program first imports the package. It is created by slice2py and must not be edited manually. Inside the file is Python code to import the generated files that contain definitions in the Slice module of interest.

For example, the Slice files Process.ice and Syscall.ice both define types in the Slice module OS. First we present Process.ice:

Slice
module OS
{
    interface Process
    {
        void kill();
    }
}

And here is Syscall.ice:

Slice
#include <Process.ice>
module OS
{
    interface Syscall
    {
        Process getProcess(int pid);
    }
}

Next, we translate these files using the Slice compiler:

> slice2py -I. Process.ice Syscall.ice

If we list the contents of the output directory, we see the following entries:

Python
OS/
OS/__init__.py
Process_ice.py
Syscall_ice.py

The subdirectory OS is the Python package that slice2py created for the Slice module OS. Inside this directory is the special file __init__.py that contains the following statements:

Python
import Process_ice
import Syscall_ice

Now when a Python program executes import OS, the two files Process_ice.py and Syscall_ice.py are implicitly imported.

Subsequent invocations of slice2py for Slice files that also contain definitions in the OS module result in additional import statements being added to OS/__init__.py. Be aware, however, that import statements may persist in __init__.py files after a Slice file is renamed or becomes obsolete. This situation may manifest itself as a run-time error if the interpreter can no longer locate the generated file while attempting to import the package. It may also cause more subtle problems, if an obsolete generated file is still present and being loaded unintentionally. In general, it is advisable to remove the package directory and regenerate it whenever the set of Slice files changes.

A Python program may also import a generated file explicitly, using a statement such as import Process_ice. Typically, however, it is more convenient to import the Python module once, rather than importing potentially several individual files that comprise the module, especially when you consider that the program must still import the module explicitly in order to make its definitions available. For example, it is much simpler to state

Python
import OS

rather than the following alternative:

Python
import Process_ice
import Syscall_ice
import OS

Customizing Compiler Output using Metadata in Python

As we showed in the previous section, the compiler by default generates all files and package directories into the specified output directory. Furthermore, the generated code assumes that all of the generated files are globally accessible via the Python search path. Continuing with our last example, the package initialization file OS/__init__.py will contain the statements:

Python
import Process_ice
import Syscall_ice

An application that wants to import these Slice definitions must therefore ensure that its search path includes the directory containing Process_ice.pySyscall_ice.py, and the OS subdirectory.

For an application with many Slice files, the output directory can quickly become cluttered with generated *_ice.py files. If you intend to install the compiler output into a common system directory such as site-packages, you may want more control over the location of the files. Note that you can't simply move the *_ice.py files into a different subdirectory without also adding that directory to the search path or modifying every generated file that imports those files.

A simpler solution is to add a global metadata directive named python:pkgdir to each Slice file that specifies the directory into which the compiler should place the corresponding *_ice.py file. This directive also affects the import statement that the compiler emits whenever the generated code is referenced. The compiler treats the specified directory as being relative to the output directory denoted by --output-dir, or to the current working directory if --output-dir is not defined.

Let's add the metadata directive to our sample Slice files, starting with Process.ice:

Slice
[["python:pkgdir:OS"]]
 
module OS
{
    interface Process
    {
        void kill();
    }
}

And here is Syscall.ice:

Slice
[["python:pkgdir:OS"]]
 
#include <Process.ice>
module OS
{
    interface Syscall
    {
        Process getProcess(int pid);
    }
}

We used the same directive, python:pkgdir:OS, in both Slice files. The compiler now generates the following output:

Python
OS/
OS/__init__.py
OS/Process_ice.py
OS/Syscall_ice.py

The package initialization file OS/__init__.py imports the *_ice.py files as shown below:

Python
import OS.Process_ice
import OS.Syscall_ice

Our metadata example specifies the same directory as the top-level Slice module OS, which means the *_ice.py files are placed into the top-level Python package OS. This is convenient from an organizational standpoint but you are not required to use the same name. We could specify an arbitrary name, such as python:pkgdir:OS_gen, and the compiler would generate:

Python
OS/
OS/__init__.py
OS_gen/__init__.py    # This file is empty
OS_gen/Process_ice.py
OS_gen/Syscall_ice.py

Using an alternate directory as shown above does not affect the package in which the definitions are placed at run time. For example, your application would still refer to OS.Process as before. The python:pkgdir metadata only affects the directory in which the *_ice.py file is placed.

The metadata directive can optionally specify a nested subdirectory, such as python:pkgdir:OS/gen. The compiler would generate OS/gen/Process_ice.py into the output directory, and this file would be imported as OS.gen.Process_ice. Your metadata directive must use forward slashes when specifying a nested subdirectory.

Include Files in Python

It's important to understand how slice2py handles include files. In the absence of the --all option, the compiler does not generate Python code for Slice definitions in included files. Rather, the compiler translates Slice #include statements into Python import statements as described below.

Include Files with python:pkgdir Metadata

When the include file contains a python:pkgdir metadata directive, the specified directory is translated into a package name. For example, the metadata directive python:pkgdir:OS/gen becomes the package name OS.gen. If the name of the include file is Process.ice, then the compiler generates

import OS.gen.Process_ice

Include Files without python:pkgdir Metadata

If the python:pkgdir metadata is not present, the compiler determines the full path name of the include file and creates the shortest possible relative path name for the include file by iterating over each of the include directories (specified using the -I option) and removing the leading directory from the include file if possible. For example, if the full path name of an include file is /opt/App/slice/OS/Process.ice, and we specified the options -I/opt/App and -I/opt/App/slice, then the shortest relative path name is OS/Process.ice after removing /opt/App/slice. Any remaining slashes are replaced with underscores, so the import statement for OS/Process.ice becomes

import OS_Process_ice

There is a potential problem here that must be addressed. The generated import statement for our example above expects to find the file OS_Process_ice.py somewhere in Python's search path. However, slice2py uses a different default name, Process_ice.py, when it compiles Process.ice.. To resolve this issue, we must use the --prefix option when compiling Process.ice:

slice2py --prefix OS_ Process.ice

The --prefix option causes the compiler to prepend the specified prefix to the name of each generated file. When executed, the above command creates the desired file name: OS_Process_ice.py.

It should be apparent by now that generating Python code for a complex Ice application requires a bit of planning. In particular, it is imperative that you be consistent in your use of #include statements, include directories, and --prefix options to ensure that the correct file names are used at all times.

Of course, these precautionary steps are only necessary when you are compiling Slice files individually. An alternative is to use the --all option and generate Python code for all of your Slice definitions into one Python source file. If you do not have a suitable Slice file that includes all necessary Slice definitions, you could write a "master" Slice file specifically for this purpose.

Static Versus Dynamic Code Generation in Python

There are several issues to consider when evaluating your requirements for code generation.

Application Considerations for Code Generation in Python

The requirements of your application generally dictate whether you should use dynamic or static code generation. Dynamic code generation is convenient for a number of reasons:

  • it avoids the intermediate compilation step required by static code generation
  • it makes the application more compact because the application requires only the Slice files, not the assortment of files and directories produced by static code generation
  • it reduces complexity, which is especially helpful during testing, or when writing short or transient programs.

Static code generation, on the other hand, is appropriate in many situations:

  • when an application uses a large number of Slice definitions and the startup delay must be minimized
  • when it is not feasible to deploy Slice files with the application
  • when a number of applications share the same Slice files
  • when Python code is required in order to utilize third-party Python tools.

Mixing Static and Dynamic Code Generation in Python

Using a combination of static and dynamic translation in an application can produce unexpected results. For example, consider a situation where a dynamically-translated Slice file includes another Slice file that was statically translated:

Slice
// Slice
#include <Glacier2/Session.ice>

module App
{
    interface SessionFactory
    {
        Glacier2::Session* createSession();
    }
}

The Slice file Session.ice is statically translated, as are all of the Slice files included with the Ice run time.

Assuming the above definitions are saved in App.ice, let's execute a simple Python script:

Python
# Python
import Ice
Ice.loadSlice("-I/opt/Ice/slice App.ice")

import Glacier2
class MyVerifier(Glacier2.PermissionsVerifier): # Error
    def checkPermissions(self, userId, password):
        return (True, "")

The code looks reasonable, but running it produces the following error:

'module' object has no attribute 'PermissionsVerifier'

Normally, importing the Glacier2 module as we have done here would load all of the Python code generated for the Glacier2 Slice files. However, since App.ice has already included a subset of the Glacier2 definitions, the Python interpreter ignores any subsequent requests to import the entire module, and therefore the PermissionsVerifier type is not present.

One way to address this problem is to import the statically-translated modules first, prior to loading Slice files dynamically:

Python
# Python
import Ice, Glacier2 # Import Glacier2 before App.ice is loaded
Ice.loadSlice("-I/opt/Ice/slice App.ice")

class MyVerifier(Glacier2.PermissionsVerifier): # OK
    def checkPermissions(self, userId, password):
        return (True, "")

The disadvantage of this approach in a non-trivial application is that it breaks encapsulation, forcing one Python module to know what other modules are doing. For example, suppose we place our PermissionsVerifier implementation in a module named verifier.py:

Python
# Python
import Glacier2
class MyVerifier(Glacier2.PermissionsVerifier):
    def checkPermissions(self, userId, password):
        return (True, "")

Now that the use of Glacier2 definitions is encapsulated in verifier.py, we would like to remove references to Glacier2 from the main script:

Python
# Python
import Ice
Ice.loadSlice("-I/opt/Ice/slice App.ice")
...
import verifier # Error
v = verifier.MyVerifier()

Unfortunately, executing this script produces the same error as before. To fix it, we have to break the verifier module's encapsulation and import the Glacier2 module in the main script because we know that the verifier module requires it:

Python
# Python
import Ice, Glacier2
Ice.loadSlice("-I/opt/Ice/slice App.ice")
...
import verifier # OK
v = verifier.MyVerifier()

Although breaking encapsulation in this way might offend our sense of good design, it is a relatively minor issue.

Another solution is to import the necessary submodules explicitly. We can safely remove the Glacier2 reference from our main script after rewriting verifier.py as shown below:

Python
# Python
import Glacier2.PermissionsVerifier_ice
import Glacier2
class MyVerifier(Glacier2.PermissionsVerifier):
    def checkPermissions(self, userId, password):
        return (True, "")

Using the rules defined for static code generation, we can derive the name of the module containing the code generated for PermissionsVerifier.ice and import it directly. We need a second import statement to make the Glacier2 definitions accessible in this module.

slice2py Command-Line Options

The Slice-to-Python compiler, slice2py, offers the following command-line options in addition to the standard options:

  • --all
    Generate code for all Slice definitions, including those from included files.
  • --checksum
    Generate checksums for Slice definitions.
  • --prefix PREFIX
    Use PREFIX as the prefix for generated file names.

 

Generating Packages in Python

By default, the scope of a Slice definition determines the module of its mapped Python construct. There are times, however, when applications require greater control over the packaging of generated Python code. For example, consider the following Slice definitions:

Slice
module sys
{
    interface Process
    {
        // ...
    }
}

Other language mappings can use these Slice definitions as shown, but they present a problem for the Python mapping: the top-level Slice module sys conflicts with Python's predefined module sys. A Python application executing the statement import sys would import whichever module the interpreter happens to locate first in its search path.

A workaround for this problem is to modify the Slice definitions so that the top-level module no longer conflicts with a predefined Python module, but that may not be feasible in certain situations. For example, the application may already be deployed using other language mappings, in which case the impact of modifying the Slice definitions could represent an unacceptable expense.

The Python mapping could have addressed this issue by considering the names of predefined modules to be reserved, in which case the Slice module sys would be mapped to the Python module _sys. However, the likelihood of a name conflict is relatively low to justify such a solution, therefore the mapping supports a different approach: global metadata can be used to enclose generated code in a Python package. Our modified Slice definitions demonstrate this feature:

Slice
[["python:package:zeroc"]]
module sys
{
    interface Process
    {
        // ...
    }
}

The global metadata directive python:package:zeroc causes the mapping to generate all of the code resulting from definitions in this Slice file into the Python package zeroc. The net effect is the same as if we had enclosed our Slice definitions in the module zeroc: the Slice module sys is mapped to the Python module zeroc.sys. However, by using metadata we have not affected the semantics of the Slice definitions, nor have we affected other language mappings.

See Also

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