New in version 3.12.
Find Python 3 interpreter, compiler and development environment (include directories and libraries).
When a version is requested, it can be specified as a simple value or as a range. For a detailed description of version range usage and capabilities, refer to the find_package()
command.
The following components are supported:
Interpreter
: search for Python 3 interpreterCompiler
: search for Python 3 compiler. Only offered by IronPython.Development
: search for development artifacts (include directories and libraries). This component includes two sub-components which can be specified independently:
Development.Module
: search for artifacts for Python 3 module developments.Development.Embed
: search for artifacts for Python 3 embedding developments.NumPy
: search for NumPy include directories.If no COMPONENTS
are specified, Interpreter
is assumed.
If component Development
is specified, it implies sub-components Development.Module
and Development.Embed
.
To ensure consistent versions between components Interpreter
, Compiler
, Development
(or one of its sub-components) and NumPy
, specify all components at the same time:
find_package (Python3 COMPONENTS Interpreter Development)
This module looks only for version 3 of Python. This module can be used concurrently with FindPython2
module to use both Python versions.
The FindPython
module can be used if Python version does not matter for you.
Note
If components Interpreter
and Development
(or one of its sub-components) are both specified, this module search only for interpreter with same platform architecture as the one defined by CMake
configuration. This constraint does not apply if only Interpreter
component is specified.
This module defines the following Imported Targets (when CMAKE_ROLE
is PROJECT
):
Python3::Interpreter
Python 3 interpreter. Target defined if component Interpreter
is found.
Python3::Compiler
Python 3 compiler. Target defined if component Compiler
is found.
Python3::Module
Python 3 library for Python module. Target defined if component Development.Module
is found.
Python3::Python
Python 3 library for Python embedding. Target defined if component Development.Embed
is found.
Python3::NumPy
NumPy library for Python 3. Target defined if component NumPy
is found.
This module will set the following variables in your project (see Standard Variable Names):
Python3_FOUND
System has the Python 3 requested components.
Python3_Interpreter_FOUND
System has the Python 3 interpreter.
Python3_EXECUTABLE
Path to the Python 3 interpreter.
Python3_INTERPRETER_ID
Python3_STDLIB
Standard platform independent installation directory.
Information returned by distutils.sysconfig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=True)
or else sysconfig.get_path('stdlib')
.
Python3_STDARCH
Standard platform dependent installation directory.
Information returned by distutils.sysconfig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=True)
or else sysconfig.get_path('platstdlib')
.
Python3_SITELIB
Third-party platform independent installation directory.
Information returned by distutils.sysconfig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=False,standard_lib=False)
or else sysconfig.get_path('purelib')
.
Python3_SITEARCH
Third-party platform dependent installation directory.
Information returned by distutils.sysconfig.get_python_lib(plat_specific=True,standard_lib=False)
or else sysconfig.get_path('platlib')
.
Python3_SOABI
Extension suffix for modules.
Information returned by distutils.sysconfig.get_config_var('SOABI')
or computed from distutils.sysconfig.get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')
or python3-config --extension-suffix
. If package distutils.sysconfig
is not available, sysconfig.get_config_var('SOABI')
or sysconfig.get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')
are used.
Python3_Compiler_FOUND
System has the Python 3 compiler.
Python3_COMPILER
Path to the Python 3 compiler. Only offered by IronPython.
Python3_COMPILER_ID
Python3_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
The .Net
interpreter. Only used by IronPython
implementation.
Python3_Development_FOUND
System has the Python 3 development artifacts.
Python3_Development.Module_FOUND
System has the Python 3 development artifacts for Python module.
Python3_Development.Embed_FOUND
System has the Python 3 development artifacts for Python embedding.
Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS
The Python 3 include directories.
Python3_LINK_OPTIONS
The Python 3 link options. Some configurations require specific link options for a correct build and execution.
Python3_LIBRARIES
The Python 3 libraries.
Python3_LIBRARY_DIRS
The Python 3 library directories.
Python3_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DIRS
The Python 3 runtime library directories.
Python3_VERSION
Python 3 version.
Python3_VERSION_MAJOR
Python 3 major version.
Python3_VERSION_MINOR
Python 3 minor version.
Python3_VERSION_PATCH
Python 3 patch version.
Python3_PyPy_VERSION
Python 3 PyPy version.
Python3_NumPy_FOUND
System has the NumPy.
Python3_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS
The NumPy include directories.
Python3_NumPy_VERSION
The NumPy version.
Python3_ROOT_DIR
Define the root directory of a Python 3 installation.
Python3_USE_STATIC_LIBS
Python3_FIND_ABI
This variable defines which ABIs, as defined in PEP 3149, should be searched.
Note
If Python3_FIND_ABI
is not defined, any ABI will be searched.
The Python3_FIND_ABI
variable is a 3-tuple specifying, in that order, pydebug
(d
), pymalloc
(m
) and unicode
(u
) flags. Each element can be set to one of the following:
ON
: Corresponding flag is selected.OFF
: Corresponding flag is not selected.ANY
: The two possibilities (ON
and OFF
) will be searched.From this 3-tuple, various ABIs will be searched starting from the most specialized to the most general. Moreover, debug
versions will be searched after non-debug
ones.
For example, if we have:
set (Python3_FIND_ABI "ON" "ANY" "ANY")
The following flags combinations will be appended, in that order, to the artifact names: dmu
, dm
, du
, and d
.
And to search any possible ABIs:
set (Python3_FIND_ABI "ANY" "ANY" "ANY")
The following combinations, in that order, will be used: mu
, m
, u
, <empty>
, dmu
, dm
, du
and d
.
Note
This hint is useful only on POSIX
systems. So, on Windows
systems, when Python3_FIND_ABI
is defined, Python
distributions from python.org will be found only if value for each flag is OFF
or ANY
.
Python3_FIND_STRATEGY
This variable defines how lookup will be done. The Python3_FIND_STRATEGY
variable can be set to one of the following:
Python3_FIND_REGISTRY
On Windows the Python3_FIND_REGISTRY
variable determine the order of preference between registry and environment variables. The Python3_FIND_REGISTRY
variable can be set to one of the following:
FIRST
: Try to use registry before environment variables. This is the default.LAST
: Try to use registry after environment variables.NEVER
: Never try to use registry.Python3_FIND_FRAMEWORK
On macOS the Python3_FIND_FRAMEWORK
variable determine the order of preference between Apple-style and unix-style package components. This variable can take same values as CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
variable.
Note
Value ONLY
is not supported so FIRST
will be used instead.
If Python3_FIND_FRAMEWORK
is not defined, CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
variable will be used, if any.
Python3_FIND_VIRTUALENV
This variable defines the handling of virtual environments managed by virtualenv
or conda
. It is meaningful only when a virtual environment is active (i.e. the activate
script has been evaluated). In this case, it takes precedence over Python3_FIND_REGISTRY
and CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
variables. The Python3_FIND_VIRTUALENV
variable can be set to one of the following:
FIRST
: The virtual environment is used before any other standard paths to look-up for the interpreter. This is the default.ONLY
: Only the virtual environment is used to look-up for the interpreter.STANDARD
: The virtual environment is not used to look-up for the interpreter but environment variable PATH
is always considered. In this case, variable Python3_FIND_REGISTRY
(Windows) or CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK
(macOS) can be set with value LAST
or NEVER
to select preferably the interpreter from the virtual environment.Note
If the component Development
is requested, it is strongly recommended to also include the component Interpreter
to get expected result.
Python3_FIND_IMPLEMENTATIONS
This variable defines, in an ordered list, the different implementations which will be searched. The Python3_FIND_IMPLEMENTATIONS
variable can hold the following values:
CPython
: this is the standard implementation. Various products, like Anaconda
or ActivePython
, rely on this implementation.IronPython
: This implementation use the CSharp
language for .NET Framework
on top of the Dynamic Language Runtime
(DLR
). See IronPython.PyPy
: This implementation use RPython
language and RPython translation toolchain
to produce the python interpreter. See PyPy.The default value is:
CPython
, IronPython
CPython
Note
This hint has the lowest priority of all hints, so even if, for example, you specify IronPython
first and CPython
in second, a python product based on CPython
can be selected because, for example with Python3_FIND_STRATEGY=LOCATION
, each location will be search first for IronPython
and second for CPython
.
Note
When IronPython
is specified, on platforms other than Windows
, the .Net
interpreter (i.e. mono
command) is expected to be available through the PATH
variable.
To solve special cases, it is possible to specify directly the artifacts by setting the following variables:
Python3_EXECUTABLE
The path to the interpreter.
Python3_COMPILER
The path to the compiler.
Python3_DOTNET_LAUNCHER
The .Net
interpreter. Only used by IronPython
implementation.
Python3_LIBRARY
The path to the library. It will be used to compute the variables Python3_LIBRARIES
, Python3_LIBRARY_DIRS
and Python3_RUNTIME_LIBRARY_DIRS
.
Python3_INCLUDE_DIR
The path to the directory of the Python
headers. It will be used to compute the variable Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS
.
Python3_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIR
The path to the directory of the NumPy
headers. It will be used to compute the variable Python3_NumPy_INCLUDE_DIRS
.
Note
All paths must be absolute. Any artifact specified with a relative path will be ignored.
Note
When an artifact is specified, all HINTS
will be ignored and no search will be performed for this artifact.
If more than one artifact is specified, it is the user’s responsibility to ensure the consistency of the various artifacts.
By default, this module supports multiple calls in different directories of a project with different version/component requirements while providing correct and consistent results for each call. To support this behavior, CMake
cache is not used in the traditional way which can be problematic for interactive specification. So, to enable also interactive specification, module behavior can be controlled with the following variable:
Python3_ARTIFACTS_INTERACTIVE
Selects the behavior of the module. This is a boolean variable:
TRUE
: Create CMake cache entries for the above artifact specification variables so that users can edit them interactively. This disables support for multiple version/component requirements.FALSE
or undefined: Enable multiple version/component requirements.This module defines the command Python3_add_library
(when CMAKE_ROLE
is PROJECT
), which has the same semantics as add_library()
and adds a dependency to target Python3::Python
or, when library type is MODULE
, to target Python3::Module
and takes care of Python module naming rules:
Python3_add_library (<name> [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE [WITH_SOABI]] <source1> [<source2> ...])
If the library type is not specified, MODULE
is assumed.
For MODULE
library type, if option WITH_SOABI
is specified, the module suffix will include the Python3_SOABI
value, if any.
© 2000–2020 Kitware, Inc. and Contributors
Licensed under the BSD 3-clause License.
https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.19/module/FindPython3.html