Staging
v0.5.1
Revision 550e4673be538d98b6ddf5550b3922539cf5c4b2 authored by Victor Stinner on 08 December 2020, 23:32:54 UTC, committed by GitHub on 08 December 2020, 23:32:54 UTC
pymain_run_startup() now pass the filename as a Python object to
_PyRun_SimpleFileObject().
1 parent 98a5417
Raw File
stable.rst
.. highlight:: c

.. _stable:

***********************************
Stable Application Binary Interface
***********************************

Traditionally, the C API of Python will change with every release.  Most changes
will be source-compatible, typically by only adding API, rather than changing
existing API or removing API (although some interfaces do get removed after
being deprecated first).

Unfortunately, the API compatibility does not extend to binary compatibility
(the ABI). The reason is primarily the evolution of struct definitions, where
addition of a new field, or changing the type of a field, might not break the
API, but can break the ABI.  As a consequence, extension modules need to be
recompiled for every Python release (although an exception is possible on Unix
when none of the affected interfaces are used). In addition, on Windows,
extension modules link with a specific pythonXY.dll and need to be recompiled to
link with a newer one.

Since Python 3.2, a subset of the API has been declared to guarantee a stable
ABI. Extension modules wishing to use this API (called "limited API") need to
define ``Py_LIMITED_API``. A number of interpreter details then become hidden
from the extension module; in return, a module is built that works on any 3.x
version (x>=2) without recompilation.

In some cases, the stable ABI needs to be extended with new functions.
Extension modules wishing to use these new APIs need to set ``Py_LIMITED_API``
to the ``PY_VERSION_HEX`` value (see :ref:`apiabiversion`) of the minimum Python
version they want to support (e.g. ``0x03030000`` for Python 3.3). Such modules
will work on all subsequent Python releases, but fail to load (because of
missing symbols) on the older releases.

As of Python 3.2, the set of functions available to the limited API is
documented in :pep:`384`.  In the C API documentation, API elements that are not
part of the limited API are marked as "Not part of the limited API."
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