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/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * plpython.h - Python as a procedural language for PostgreSQL * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2016, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * src/pl/plpython/plpython.h * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #ifndef PLPYTHON_H #define PLPYTHON_H
/* * Include order should be: postgres.h, other postgres headers, plpython.h, * other plpython headers */ #ifndef POSTGRES_H #error postgres.h must be included before plpython.h #endif
/* * Undefine some things that get (re)defined in the Python headers. They aren't * used by the PL/Python code, and all PostgreSQL headers should be included * earlier, so this should be pretty safe. */ #undef _POSIX_C_SOURCE #undef _XOPEN_SOURCE #undef HAVE_STRERROR #undef HAVE_TZNAME
/* * Sometimes python carefully scribbles on our *printf macros. * So we undefine them here and redefine them after it's done its dirty deed. */
#ifdef USE_REPL_SNPRINTF #undef snprintf #undef vsnprintf #endif
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && defined(_DEBUG) /* Python uses #pragma to bring in a non-default libpython on VC++ if * _DEBUG is defined */ #undef _DEBUG /* Also hide away errcode, since we load Python.h before postgres.h */ #define errcode __msvc_errcode #include <Python.h> #undef errcode #define _DEBUG #elif defined (_MSC_VER) #define errcode __msvc_errcode #include <Python.h> #undef errcode #else #include <Python.h> #endif
/* * Py_ssize_t compat for Python <= 2.4 */ #if PY_VERSION_HEX < 0x02050000 && !defined(PY_SSIZE_T_MIN) typedef int Py_ssize_t;
#define PY_SSIZE_T_MAX INT_MAX #define PY_SSIZE_T_MIN INT_MIN #endif
/* * Python 2/3 strings/unicode/bytes handling. Python 2 has strings * and unicode, Python 3 has strings, which are unicode on the C * level, and bytes. The porting convention, which is similarly used * in Python 2.6, is that "Unicode" is always unicode, and "Bytes" are * bytes in Python 3 and strings in Python 2. Since we keep * supporting Python 2 and its usual strings, we provide a * compatibility layer for Python 3 that when asked to convert a C * string to a Python string it converts the C string from the * PostgreSQL server encoding to a Python Unicode object. */
#if PY_VERSION_HEX < 0x02060000 /* This is exactly the compatibility layer that Python 2.6 uses. */ #define PyBytes_AsString PyString_AsString #define PyBytes_FromStringAndSize PyString_FromStringAndSize #define PyBytes_Size PyString_Size #define PyObject_Bytes PyObject_Str #endif
#if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3 #define PyString_Check(x) 0 #define PyString_AsString(x) PLyUnicode_AsString(x) #define PyString_FromString(x) PLyUnicode_FromString(x) #define PyString_FromStringAndSize(x, size) PLyUnicode_FromStringAndSize(x, size) #endif
/* * Python 3 only has long. */ #if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3 #define PyInt_FromLong(x) PyLong_FromLong(x) #define PyInt_AsLong(x) PyLong_AsLong(x) #endif
/* * PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT was added in Python 2.6. Its use is * necessary to handle both Python 2 and 3. This replacement * definition is for Python <=2.5 */ #ifndef PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT #define PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT(type, size) \ PyObject_HEAD_INIT(type) size, #endif
/* Python 3 removed the Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER flag */ #if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER 0 #endif
/* define our text domain for translations */ #undef TEXTDOMAIN #define TEXTDOMAIN PG_TEXTDOMAIN("plpython")
#include <compile.h> #include <eval.h>
/* put back our snprintf and vsnprintf */ #ifdef USE_REPL_SNPRINTF #ifdef snprintf #undef snprintf #endif #ifdef vsnprintf #undef vsnprintf #endif #ifdef __GNUC__ #define vsnprintf(...) pg_vsnprintf(__VA_ARGS__) #define snprintf(...) pg_snprintf(__VA_ARGS__) #else #define vsnprintf pg_vsnprintf #define snprintf pg_snprintf #endif /* __GNUC__ */ #endif /* USE_REPL_SNPRINTF */
/* * Used throughout, and also by the Python 2/3 porting layer, so it's easier to * just include it everywhere. */ #include "plpy_util.h"
#endif /* PLPYTHON_H */
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