Documentation is available online at https://crossenv.readthedocs.io and in the
docs
directory.
Porting a Python app to an embedded device can be complicated. Once you have Python built for your system, you may find yourself needing to include many third-party libraries. Pure-Python libraries usually just work, but many popular libraries rely on compiled C code, which can be challenging to build.
This package is a tool for cross-compiling extension modules. It creates a
special virtual environment such that pip
or setup.py
will cross
compile packages for you, usually with no further work on your part.
It can be used to:
- Build binary wheels, for installation on target.
- Install packages to a directory for upload or inclusion in a firmware image.
Note: While this tool can cross-compile most Python packages, it can't solve all the problems of cross-compiling. In some cases manual intervention may still be necessary.
This tool requires Python 3.5 or higher (host and build). Significant work has gone into cross-compiling Python in newer versions, and many of the techniques needed to do the cross compilation properly are not available on older releases.
This tool currently only supports Linux build machines.
Host | The machine you are building for. (Android, iOS, other embedded systems.) |
Build | The machine you are building on. (Probably your desktop.) |
Host-python | The compiled Python binary and libraries that run on Host |
Build-python | The compiled Python binary and libraries that run on Build. |
Cross-python | Build-python, configured specially to build packages that can be run with Host-python. This tool creates Cross-python. |
Cross-python is set up carefully so that it reports all system information
exactly as Host-python would. When done correctly, a side effect of this is
that distutils
and setuptools
will cross-compile when building
packages. All of the normal packaging machinery still works correctly, so
dependencies, ABI tags, and so forth all work as expected.
You will need:
- A version of Python (3.5 or later) that runs on Build. (Build-python.)
- A version of Python that will run on Host. (Host-python.) This must be the same version as Build-python.
- The cross-compiling toolchain used to make Host-python. Make sure you set PATH correctly to use it.
- Any libraries your modules depend on, cross-compiled and installed
somewhere Cross-python can get to them. For example, the
cryptography
package depends on OpenSSL and libffi.
Crossenv can be installed using pip:
$ pip install crossenv
To create the virtual environment:
$ /path/to/build/python3 -m crossenv /path/to/host/python3 venv
This creates a folder named venv
that contains two subordinate virtual
environments: one for Build-python, and one for Cross-python. When activated,
python
(or its alias cross-python
) can be used for cross compiling. If
needed, packages can be installed on Build (e.g., a package requires Cython to
install) with build-python
. There are equivalent pip
, cross-pip
,
and build-pip
commands.
The cross-compiler to use, along with any extra flags needed, are taken from information recorded when Host-python was compiled. To activate the environment:
$ . venv/bin/activate
You can now see that python
seems to think it's running on Host:
(cross) $ python -m sysconfig ...
Now you can cross compile! To install a package to
venv/cross/lib/python3.6/site-packages
, you can use pip directly:
(cross) $ pip -v install numpy ...
You can use setup.py
to build wheels:
(cross) $ pip install wheel (cross) $ pip download numpy Collecting numpy Using cached numpy-1.14.1.zip Saved ./numpy-1.14.1.zip Successfully downloaded numpy (cross) $ unzip -q ./numpy-1.14.1.zip (cross) $ cd numpy-1.14.1 (cross) $ python setup.py bdist_wheel ...
When you need packages like Cython or cffi installed to build another module,
sometimes satisfying dependencies can get tricky. If you simply pip install
the module, you may find it builds Cython as a prerequisite for the host and
then tries to run it on the build machine. This will fail, of course, but if we
install the necessary package for build-python
, then pip
will pick up
the correct version during install.
For example, to build bcrypt and python-cryptography:
(cross) $ build-pip install cffi (cross) $ pip install bcrypt (cross) $ pip install cryptography
Some packages do explicit checks for existence of a package. For instance, a
package may do a check for Cython (other than simply trying to import it)
before proceeding with installation. If a package is installed with
build-pip
, etc., then setuptools in cross-python
does not recognize it
as installed. (Note that you can still import it even if setuptools can't see
it, so the naive check of import Cython
will work fine so long as you did
build-pip install Cython
earlier.) This is by design. To selectively expose
build-python packages so that setuptools will count them as installed, you can
use the cross-expose
script installed in the virtual environment.
- Upgrading
cross-pip
andbuild-pip
must be done carefully, and it's best not to do so unless you need to. If you need to: upgradecross-pip
first, thenbuild-pip
. - When installing scripts, the shebang (
#!
) line is wrong. This will need to be fixed up before using on Host. - Any dependant libraries used during the build, such as OpenSSL, are not packaged in the wheel or install directory. You will need to ensure that these libraries are installed on Host and can be used. This is the normal Python behavior.
- Any setup-time requirement listed in
setup.py
undersetup_requires
will be installed in Cross-python's virtual environment, not Build-python. This will mostly work anyway if they are pure-Python, but for packages with extension modules (Cython, etc.), you will need to install them into Build-python's environment first. It's often a good idea to do abuild-pip install <whatever>
prior topip install <whatever>
.