CFFI Reference

FFI Interface

This page documents the runtime interface of the two types “FFI” and “CompiledFFI”. These two types are very similar to each other. You get a CompiledFFI object if you import an out-of-line module. You get a FFI object from explicitly writing cffi.FFI(). Unlike CompiledFFI, the type FFI has also got additional methods documented on the next page.

ffi.NULL

ffi.NULL: a constant NULL of type <cdata 'void *'>.

ffi.error

ffi.error: the Python exception raised in various cases. (Don’t confuse it with ffi.errno.)

ffi.new()

ffi.new(cdecl, init=None): allocate an instance according to the specified C type and return a pointer to it. The specified C type must be either a pointer or an array: new('X *') allocates an X and returns a pointer to it, whereas new('X[10]') allocates an array of 10 X’es and returns an array referencing it (which works mostly like a pointer, like in C). You can also use new('X[]', n) to allocate an array of a non-constant length n. See the detailed documentation for other valid initializers.

When the returned <cdata> object goes out of scope, the memory is freed. In other words the returned <cdata> object has ownership of the value of type cdecl that it points to. This means that the raw data can be used as long as this object is kept alive, but must not be used for a longer time. Be careful about that when copying the pointer to the memory somewhere else, e.g. into another structure. Also, this means that a line like x = ffi.cast("B *", ffi.new("A *")) or x = ffi.new("struct s[1]")[0] is wrong: the newly allocated object goes out of scope instantly, and so is freed immediately, and x is garbage. The only case where this is fine comes from a special case for pointers-to-struct and pointers-to-union types: after p = ffi.new("struct-or-union *", ..), then either p or p[0] keeps the memory alive.

The returned memory is initially cleared (filled with zeroes), before the optional initializer is applied. For performance, see ffi.new_allocator() for a way to allocate non-zero-initialized memory.

New in version 1.12: see also ffi.release().

ffi.cast()

ffi.cast(“C type”, value): similar to a C cast: returns an instance of the named C type initialized with the given value. The value is casted between integers or pointers of any type.

ffi.errno, ffi.getwinerror()

ffi.errno: the value of errno received from the most recent C call in this thread, and passed to the following C call. (This is a thread-local read-write property.)

ffi.getwinerror(code=-1): on Windows, in addition to errno we also save and restore the GetLastError() value across function calls. This function returns this error code as a tuple (code, message), adding a readable message like Python does when raising WindowsError. If the argument code is given, format that code into a message instead of using GetLastError(). (Note that it is also possible to declare and call the GetLastError() function as usual.)

ffi.string(), ffi.unpack()

ffi.string(cdata, [maxlen]): return a Python string (or unicode string) from the ‘cdata’.

  • If ‘cdata’ is a pointer or array of characters or bytes, returns the null-terminated string. The returned string extends until the first null character. The ‘maxlen’ argument limits how far we look for a null character. If ‘cdata’ is an array then ‘maxlen’ defaults to its length. See ffi.unpack() below for a way to continue past the first null character. Python 3: this returns a bytes, not a str.
  • If ‘cdata’ is a pointer or array of wchar_t, returns a unicode string following the same rules. New in version 1.11: can also be char16_t or char32_t.
  • If ‘cdata’ is a single character or byte or a wchar_t or charN_t, returns it as a byte string or unicode string. (Note that in some situation a single wchar_t or char32_t may require a Python unicode string of length 2.)
  • If ‘cdata’ is an enum, returns the value of the enumerator as a string. If the value is out of range, it is simply returned as the stringified integer.

ffi.unpack(cdata, length): unpacks an array of C data of the given length, returning a Python string/unicode/list. The ‘cdata’ should be a pointer; if it is an array it is first converted to the pointer type. New in version 1.6.

  • If ‘cdata’ is a pointer to ‘char’, returns a byte string. It does not stop at the first null. (An equivalent way to do that is ffi.buffer(cdata, length)[:].)
  • If ‘cdata’ is a pointer to ‘wchar_t’, returns a unicode string. (‘length’ is measured in number of wchar_t; it is not the size in bytes.) New in version 1.11: can also be char16_t or char32_t.
  • If ‘cdata’ is a pointer to anything else, returns a list, of the given ‘length’. (A slower way to do that is [cdata[i] for i in range(length)].)

ffi.buffer(), ffi.from_buffer()

ffi.buffer(cdata, [size]): return a buffer object that references the raw C data pointed to by the given ‘cdata’, of ‘size’ bytes. What Python calls “a buffer”, or more precisely “an object supporting the buffer interface”, is an object that represents some raw memory and that can be passed around to various built-in or extension functions; these built-in functions read from or write to the raw memory directly, without needing an extra copy.

The ‘cdata’ argument must be a pointer or an array. If unspecified, the size of the buffer is either the size of what cdata points to, or the whole size of the array.

Here are a few examples of where buffer() would be useful:

  • use file.write() and file.readinto() with such a buffer (for files opened in binary mode)
  • overwrite the content of a struct: if p is a cdata pointing to it, use ffi.buffer(p)[:] = newcontent, where newcontent is a bytes object (str in Python 2).

Remember that like in C, you can use array + index to get the pointer to the index’th item of an array. (In C you might more naturally write &array[index], but that is equivalent.)

The returned object’s type is not the builtin buffer nor memoryview types, because these types’ API changes too much across Python versions. Instead it has the following Python API (a subset of Python 2’s buffer) in addition to supporting the buffer interface:

  • buf[:] or bytes(buf): copy data out of the buffer, returning a regular byte string (or buf[start:end] for a part)
  • buf[:] = newstr: copy data into the buffer (or buf[start:end] = newstr)
  • len(buf), buf[index], buf[index] = newchar: access as a sequence of characters.

The buffer object returned by ffi.buffer(cdata) keeps alive the cdata object: if it was originally an owning cdata, then its owned memory will not be freed as long as the buffer is alive.

Python 2/3 compatibility note: you should avoid using str(buf), because it gives inconsistent results between Python 2 and Python 3. (This is similar to how str() gives inconsistent results on regular byte strings). Use buf[:] instead.

New in version 1.10: ffi.buffer is now the type of the returned buffer objects; ffi.buffer() actually calls the constructor.

ffi.from_buffer([cdecl,] python_buffer, require_writable=False): return an array cdata (by default a <cdata 'char[]'>) that points to the data of the given Python object, which must support the buffer interface. Note that ffi.from_buffer() turns a generic Python buffer object into a cdata object, whereas ffi.buffer() does the opposite conversion. Both calls don’t actually copy any data.

ffi.from_buffer() is meant to be used on objects containing large quantities of raw data, like bytearrays or array.array or numpy arrays. It supports both the old buffer API (in Python 2.x) and the new memoryview API. Note that if you pass a read-only buffer object, you still get a regular <cdata 'char[]'>; it is your responsibility not to write there if the original buffer doesn’t expect you to. In particular, never modify byte strings!

The original object is kept alive (and, in case of memoryview, locked) as long as the cdata object returned by ffi.from_buffer() is alive.

A common use case is calling a C function with some char * that points to the internal buffer of a Python object; for this case you can directly pass ffi.from_buffer(python_buffer) as argument to the call.

New in version 1.10: the python_buffer can be anything supporting the buffer/memoryview interface (except unicode strings). Previously, bytearray objects were supported in version 1.7 onwards (careful, if you resize the bytearray, the <cdata> object will point to freed memory); and byte strings were supported in version 1.8 onwards.

New in version 1.12: added the optional first argument cdecl, and the keyword argument require_writable:

  • cdecl defaults to "char[]", but a different array or (from version 1.13) pointer type can be specified for the result. A value like "int[]" will return an array of ints instead of chars, and its length will be set to the number of ints that fit in the buffer (rounded down if the division is not exact). Values like "int[42]" or "int[2][3]" will return an array of exactly 42 (resp. 2-by-3) ints, raising a ValueError if the buffer is too small. The difference between specifying "int[]" and using the older code p1 = ffi.from_buffer(x); p2 = ffi.cast("int *", p1) is that the older code needs to keep p1 alive as long as p2 is in use, because only p1 keeps the underlying Python object alive and locked. (In addition, ffi.from_buffer("int[]", x) gives better array bound checking.)

    New in version 1.13: cdecl can be a pointer type. If it points to a struct or union, you can, as usual, write p.field instead of p[0].field. You can also access p[n]; note that CFFI does not perform any bounds checking in this case. Note also that p[0] cannot be used to keep the buffer alive (unlike what occurs with ffi.new()).

  • if require_writable is set to True, the function fails if the buffer obtained from python_buffer is read-only (e.g. if python_buffer is a byte string). The exact exception is raised by the object itself, and for things like bytes it varies with the Python version, so don’t rely on it. (Before version 1.12, the same effect can be achieved with a hack: call ffi.memmove(python_buffer, b"", 0). This has no effect if the object is writable, but fails if it is read-only.) Please keep in mind that CFFI does not implement the C keyword const: even if you set require_writable to False explicitly, you still get a regular read-write cdata pointer.

New in version 1.12: see also ffi.release().

ffi.memmove()

ffi.memmove(dest, src, n): copy n bytes from memory area src to memory area dest. See examples below. Inspired by the C functions memcpy() and memmove()—like the latter, the areas can overlap. Each of dest and src can be either a cdata pointer or a Python object supporting the buffer/memoryview interface. In the case of dest, the buffer/memoryview must be writable. New in version 1.3. Examples:

  • ffi.memmove(myptr, b"hello", 5) copies the 5 bytes of b"hello" to the area that myptr points to.
  • ba = bytearray(100); ffi.memmove(ba, myptr, 100) copies 100 bytes from myptr into the bytearray ba.
  • ffi.memmove(myptr + 1, myptr, 100) shifts 100 bytes from the memory at myptr to the memory at myptr + 1.

In versions before 1.10, ffi.from_buffer() had restrictions on the type of buffer, which made ffi.memmove() more general.

ffi.typeof(), ffi.sizeof(), ffi.alignof()

ffi.typeof(“C type” or cdata object): return an object of type <ctype> corresponding to the parsed string, or to the C type of the cdata instance. Usually you don’t need to call this function or to explicitly manipulate <ctype> objects in your code: any place that accepts a C type can receive either a string or a pre-parsed ctype object (and because of caching of the string, there is no real performance difference). It can still be useful in writing typechecks, e.g.:

def myfunction(ptr):
    assert ffi.typeof(ptr) is ffi.typeof("foo_t*")
    ...

Note also that the mapping from strings like "foo_t*" to the <ctype> objects is stored in some internal dictionary. This guarantees that there is only one <ctype 'foo_t *'> object, so you can use the is operator to compare it. The downside is that the dictionary entries are immortal for now. In the future, we may add transparent reclamation of old, unused entries. In the meantime, note that using strings like "int[%d]" % length to name a type will create many immortal cached entries if called with many different lengths.

ffi.sizeof(“C type” or cdata object): return the size of the argument in bytes. The argument can be either a C type, or a cdata object, like in the equivalent sizeof operator in C.

For array = ffi.new("T[]", n), then ffi.sizeof(array) returns n * ffi.sizeof("T"). New in version 1.9: Similar rules apply for structures with a variable-sized array at the end. More precisely, if p was returned by ffi.new("struct foo *", ...), then ffi.sizeof(p[0]) now returns the total allocated size. In previous versions, it used to just return ffi.sizeof(ffi.typeof(p[0])), which is the size of the structure ignoring the variable-sized part. (Note that due to alignment, it is possible for ffi.sizeof(p[0]) to return a value smaller than ffi.sizeof(ffi.typeof(p[0])).)

ffi.alignof(“C type”): return the natural alignment size in bytes of the argument. Corresponds to the __alignof__ operator in GCC.

ffi.offsetof(), ffi.addressof()

ffi.offsetof(“C struct or array type”, *fields_or_indexes): return the offset within the struct of the given field. Corresponds to offsetof() in C.

You can give several field names in case of nested structures. You can also give numeric values which correspond to array items, in case of a pointer or array type. For example, ffi.offsetof("int[5]", 2) is equal to the size of two integers, as is ffi.offsetof("int *", 2).

ffi.addressof(cdata, *fields_or_indexes): limited equivalent to the ‘&’ operator in C:

1. ffi.addressof(<cdata 'struct-or-union'>) returns a cdata that is a pointer to this struct or union. The returned pointer is only valid as long as the original cdata object is; be sure to keep it alive if it was obtained directly from ffi.new().

2. ffi.addressof(<cdata>, field-or-index...) returns the address of a field or array item inside the given structure or array. In case of nested structures or arrays, you can give more than one field or index to look recursively. Note that ffi.addressof(array, index) can also be expressed as array + index: this is true both in CFFI and in C, where &array[index] is just array + index.

3. ffi.addressof(<library>, "name") returns the address of the named function or global variable from the given library object. For functions, it returns a regular cdata object containing a pointer to the function.

Note that the case 1. cannot be used to take the address of a primitive or pointer, but only a struct or union. It would be difficult to implement because only structs and unions are internally stored as an indirect pointer to the data. If you need a C int whose address can be taken, use ffi.new("int[1]") in the first place; similarly, for a pointer, use ffi.new("foo_t *[1]").

ffi.CData, ffi.CType

ffi.CData, ffi.CType: the Python type of the objects referred to as <cdata> and <ctype> in the rest of this document. Note that some cdata objects may be actually of a subclass of ffi.CData, and similarly with ctype, so you should check with if isinstance(x, ffi.CData). Also, <ctype> objects have a number of attributes for introspection: kind and cname are always present, and depending on the kind they may also have item, length, fields, args, result, ellipsis, abi, elements and relements.

New in version 1.10: ffi.buffer is now a type as well.

ffi.gc()

ffi.gc(cdata, destructor, size=0): return a new cdata object that points to the same data. Later, when this new cdata object is garbage-collected, destructor(old_cdata_object) will be called. Example of usage: ptr = ffi.gc(lib.custom_malloc(42), lib.custom_free). Note that like objects returned by ffi.new(), the returned pointer objects have ownership, which means the destructor is called as soon as this exact returned object is garbage-collected.

New in version 1.12: see also ffi.release().

ffi.gc(ptr, None, size=0): removes the ownership on a object returned by a regular call to ffi.gc, and no destructor will be called when it is garbage-collected. The object is modified in-place, and the function returns None. New in version 1.7: ffi.gc(ptr, None)

Note that ffi.gc() should be avoided for limited resources, or (with cffi below 1.11) for large memory allocations. This is particularly true on PyPy: its GC does not know how much memory or how many resources the returned ptr holds. It will only run its GC when enough memory it knows about has been allocated (and thus run the destructor possibly later than you would expect). Moreover, the destructor is called in whatever thread PyPy is at that moment, which might be a problem for some C libraries. In these cases, consider writing a wrapper class with custom __enter__() and __exit__() methods, allocating and freeing the C data at known points in time, and using it in a with statement. In cffi 1.12, see also ffi.release().

New in version 1.11: the size argument. If given, this should be an estimate of the size (in bytes) that ptr keeps alive. This information is passed on to the garbage collector, fixing part of the problem described above. The size argument is most important on PyPy; on CPython, it is ignored so far, but in the future it could be used to trigger more eagerly the cyclic reference GC, too (see CPython issue 31105).

The form ffi.gc(ptr, None, size=0) can be called with a negative size, to cancel the estimate. It is not mandatory, though: nothing gets out of sync if the size estimates do not match. It only makes the next GC start more or less early.

Note that if you have several ffi.gc() objects, the corresponding destructors will be called in a random order. If you need a particular order, see the discussion in issue 340.

ffi.new_handle(), ffi.from_handle()

ffi.new_handle(python_object): return a non-NULL cdata of type void * that contains an opaque reference to python_object. You can pass it around to C functions or store it into C structures. Later, you can use ffi.from_handle(p) to retrieve the original python_object from a value with the same void * pointer. Calling ffi.from_handle(p) is invalid and will likely crash if the cdata object returned by new_handle() is not kept alive!

See a typical usage example below.

(In case you are wondering, this void * is not the PyObject * pointer. This wouldn’t make sense on PyPy anyway.)

The ffi.new_handle()/from_handle() functions conceptually work like this:

  • new_handle() returns cdata objects that contains references to the Python objects; we call them collectively the “handle” cdata objects. The void * value in these handle cdata objects are random but unique.
  • from_handle(p) searches all live “handle” cdata objects for the one that has the same value p as its void * value. It then returns the Python object referenced by that handle cdata object. If none is found, you get “undefined behavior” (i.e. crashes).

The “handle” cdata object keeps the Python object alive, similar to how ffi.new() returns a cdata object that keeps a piece of memory alive. If the handle cdata object itself is not alive any more, then the association void * -> python_object is dead and from_handle() will crash.

New in version 1.4: two calls to new_handle(x) are guaranteed to return cdata objects with different void * values, even with the same x. This is a useful feature that avoids issues with unexpected duplicates in the following trick: if you need to keep alive the “handle” until explicitly asked to free it, but don’t have a natural Python-side place to attach it to, then the easiest is to add() it to a global set. It can later be removed from the set by global_set.discard(p), with p any cdata object whose void * value compares equal.

Usage example: suppose you have a C library where you must call a lib.process_document() function which invokes some callback. The process_document() function receives a pointer to a callback and a void * argument. The callback is then invoked with the void *data argument that is equal to the provided value. In this typical case, you can implement it like this (out-of-line API mode):

class MyDocument:
    ...

    def process(self):
        h = ffi.new_handle(self)
        lib.process_document(lib.my_callback,   # the callback
                             h,                 # 'void *data'
                             args...)
        # 'h' stays alive until here, which means that the
        # ffi.from_handle() done in my_callback() during
        # the call to process_document() is safe

    def callback(self, arg1, arg2):
        ...

# the actual callback is this one-liner global function:
@ffi.def_extern()
def my_callback(arg1, arg2, data):
    return ffi.from_handle(data).callback(arg1, arg2)

ffi.dlopen(), ffi.dlclose()

ffi.dlopen(libpath, [flags]): opens and returns a “handle” to a dynamic library, as a <lib> object. See Preparing and Distributing modules.

ffi.dlclose(lib): explicitly closes a <lib> object returned by ffi.dlopen().

ffi.RLTD_…: constants: flags for ffi.dlopen().

ffi.new_allocator()

ffi.new_allocator(alloc=None, free=None, should_clear_after_alloc=True): returns a new allocator. An “allocator” is a callable that behaves like ffi.new() but uses the provided low-level alloc and free functions. New in version 1.2.

alloc() is invoked with the size as sole argument. If it returns NULL, a MemoryError is raised. Later, if free is not None, it will be called with the result of alloc() as argument. Both can be either Python function or directly C functions. If only free is None, then no free function is called. If both alloc and free are None, the default alloc/free combination is used. (In other words, the call ffi.new(*args) is equivalent to ffi.new_allocator()(*args).)

If should_clear_after_alloc is set to False, then the memory returned by alloc() is assumed to be already cleared (or you are fine with garbage); otherwise CFFI will clear it. Example: for performance, if you are using ffi.new() to allocate large chunks of memory where the initial content can be left uninitialized, you can do:

# at module level
new_nonzero = ffi.new_allocator(should_clear_after_alloc=False)

# then replace `p = ffi.new("char[]", bigsize)` with:
    p = new_nonzero("char[]", bigsize)

NOTE: the following is a general warning that applies particularly (but not only) to PyPy versions 5.6 or older (PyPy > 5.6 attempts to account for the memory returned by ffi.new() or a custom allocator; and CPython uses reference counting). If you do large allocations, then there is no hard guarantee about when the memory will be freed. You should avoid both new() and new_allocator()() if you want to be sure that the memory is promptly released, e.g. before you allocate more of it.

An alternative is to declare and call the C malloc() and free() functions, or some variant like mmap() and munmap(). Then you control exactly when the memory is allocated and freed. For example, add these two lines to your existing ffibuilder.cdef():

void *malloc(size_t size);
void free(void *ptr);

and then call these two functions manually:

p = lib.malloc(n * ffi.sizeof("int"))
try:
    my_array = ffi.cast("int *", p)
    ...
finally:
    lib.free(p)

In cffi version 1.12 you can indeed use ffi.new_allocator() but use the with statement (see ffi.release()) to force the free function to be called at a known point. The above is equivalent to this code:

my_new = ffi.new_allocator(lib.malloc, lib.free)  # at global level
...
with my_new("int[]", n) as my_array:
    ...

Warning: due to a bug, p = ffi.new_allocator(..)("struct-or-union *") might not follow the rule that either p or p[0] keeps the memory alive, which holds for the normal ffi.new("struct-or-union *") allocator. It may sometimes be the case that if there is only a reference to p[0], the memory is freed. The cause is that the rule doesn’t hold for ffi.gc(), which is sometimes used in the implementation of ffi.new_allocator()(); this might be fixed in a future release.

ffi.release() and the context manager

ffi.release(cdata): release the resources held by a cdata object from ffi.new(), ffi.gc(), ffi.from_buffer() or ffi.new_allocator()(). The cdata object must not be used afterwards. The normal Python destructor of the cdata object releases the same resources, but this allows the releasing to occur at a known time, as opposed as at an unspecified point in the future. New in version 1.12.

ffi.release(cdata) is equivalent to cdata.__exit__(), which means that you can use the with statement to ensure that the cdata is released at the end of a block (in version 1.12 and above):

with ffi.from_buffer(...) as p:
    do something with p

The effect is more precisely as follows:

  • on an object returned from ffi.gc(destructor), ffi.release() will cause the destructor to be called immediately.
  • on an object returned from a custom allocator, the custom free function is called immediately.
  • on CPython, ffi.from_buffer(buf) locks the buffer, so ffi.release() can be used to unlock it at a known time. On PyPy, there is no locking (so far); the effect of ffi.release() is limited to removing the link, allowing the original buffer object to be garbage-collected even if the cdata object stays alive.
  • on CPython this method has no effect (so far) on objects returned by ffi.new(), because the memory is allocated inline with the cdata object and cannot be freed independently. It might be fixed in future releases of cffi.
  • on PyPy, ffi.release() frees the ffi.new() memory immediately. It is useful because otherwise the memory is kept alive until the next GC occurs. If you allocate large amounts of memory with ffi.new() and don’t free them with ffi.release(), PyPy (>= 5.7) runs its GC more often to compensate, so the total memory allocated should be kept within bounds anyway; but calling ffi.release() explicitly should improve performance by reducing the frequency of GC runs.

After ffi.release(x), do not use anything pointed to by x any longer. As an exception to this rule, you can call ffi.release(x) several times for the exact same cdata object x; the calls after the first one are ignored.

ffi.init_once()

ffi.init_once(function, tag): run function() once. The tag should be a primitive object, like a string, that identifies the function: function() is only called the first time we see the tag. The return value of function() is remembered and returned by the current and all future init_once() with the same tag. If init_once() is called from multiple threads in parallel, all calls block until the execution of function() is done. If function() raises an exception, it is propagated and nothing is cached (i.e. function() will be called again, in case we catch the exception and try init_once() again). New in version 1.4.

Example:

from _xyz_cffi import ffi, lib

def initlib():
    lib.init_my_library()

def make_new_foo():
    ffi.init_once(initlib, "init")
    return lib.make_foo()

init_once() is optimized to run very quickly if function() has already been called. (On PyPy, the cost is zero—the JIT usually removes everything in the machine code it produces.)

Note: one motivation for init_once() is the CPython notion of “subinterpreters” in the embedded case. If you are using the out-of-line API mode, function() is called only once even in the presence of multiple subinterpreters, and its return value is shared among all subinterpreters. The goal is to mimic the way traditional CPython C extension modules have their init code executed only once in total even if there are subinterpreters. In the example above, the C function init_my_library() is called once in total, not once per subinterpreter. For this reason, avoid Python-level side-effects in function() (as they will only be applied in the first subinterpreter to run); instead, return a value, as in the following example:

def init_get_max():
    return lib.initialize_once_and_get_some_maximum_number()

def process(i):
    if i > ffi.init_once(init_get_max, "max"):
        raise IndexError("index too large!")
    ...

ffi.getctype(), ffi.list_types()

ffi.getctype(“C type” or <ctype>, extra=””): return the string representation of the given C type. If non-empty, the “extra” string is appended (or inserted at the right place in more complicated cases); it can be the name of a variable to declare, or an extra part of the type like "*" or "[5]". For example ffi.getctype(ffi.typeof(x), "*") returns the string representation of the C type “pointer to the same type than x”; and ffi.getctype("char[80]", "a") == "char a[80]".

ffi.list_types(): Returns the user type names known to this FFI instance. This returns a tuple containing three lists of names: (typedef_names, names_of_structs, names_of_unions). New in version 1.6.

Conversions

This section documents all the conversions that are allowed when writing into a C data structure (or passing arguments to a function call), and reading from a C data structure (or getting the result of a function call). The last column gives the type-specific operations allowed.

C type writing into reading from other operations
integers and enums [5] an integer or anything on which int() works (but not a float!). Must be within range. a Python int or long, depending on the type (ver. 1.10: or a bool) int(), bool() [6], <
char a string of length 1 or another <cdata char> a string of length 1 int(), bool(), <
wchar_t, char16_t, char32_t [8] a unicode of length 1 (or maybe 2 if surrogates) or another similar <cdata> a unicode of length 1 (or maybe 2 if surrogates) int(), bool(), <
float, double a float or anything on which float() works a Python float float(), int(), bool(), <
long double another <cdata> with a long double, or anything on which float() works a <cdata>, to avoid loosing precision [3] float(), int(), bool()
float _Complex, double _Complex a complex number or anything on which complex() works a Python complex number complex(), bool() [7]
pointers another <cdata> with a compatible type (i.e. same type or void*, or as an array instead) [1] a <cdata> [] [4], +, -, bool()
void * another <cdata> with any pointer or array type
pointers to structure or union same as pointers [], +, -, bool(), and read/write struct fields
function pointers same as pointers bool(), call [2]
arrays a list or tuple of items a <cdata> len(), iter(), [] [4], +, -
char[], un/signed char[], _Bool[] same as arrays, or a Python byte string len(), iter(), [], +, -
wchar_t[], char16_t[], char32_t[] same as arrays, or a Python unicode string len(), iter(), [], +, -
structure a list or tuple or dict of the field values, or a same-type <cdata> a <cdata> read/write fields
union same as struct, but with at most one field read/write fields

[1] item * is item[] in function arguments:

In a function declaration, as per the C standard, a item * argument is identical to a item[] argument (and ffi.cdef() doesn’t record the difference). So when you call such a function, you can pass an argument that is accepted by either C type, like for example passing a Python byte string to a char * argument (because it works for char[] arguments) or a list of integers to a int * argument (it works for int[] arguments). Note that even if you want to pass a single item, you need to specify it in a list of length 1; for example, a struct point_s * argument might be passed as [[x, y]] or [{'x': 5, 'y': 10}]. In all these cases (including passing a byte string to a char * argument), the required C data structure is created just before the call is done, and freed afterwards.

As an optimization, CFFI assumes that a function with a char * argument to which you pass a Python byte string will not actually modify the array of characters passed in, and so it attempts to pass directly a pointer inside the Python byte string object. This still doesn’t mean that the char * argument can be stored by the C function and inspected later. The char * is only valid for the duration of the call, even if the Python object is kept alive for longer. (On PyPy, this optimization is only available since PyPy 5.4 with CFFI 1.8. It may fail in rare cases and fall back to making a copy anyway, but only for short strings so it shouldn’t be noticeable.)

If you need to pass a char * that must be valid for longer than just the call, you need to build it explicitly, either with p = ffi.new("char[]", mystring) (which makes a copy) or by not using a byte string in the first place but something else like a buffer object, or a bytearray and ffi.from_buffer(); or just use ffi.new("char[]", length) directly if possible.

[2] C function calls are done with the GIL released.

Note that we assume that the called functions are not using the Python API from Python.h. For example, we don’t check afterwards if they set a Python exception. You may work around it, but mixing CFFI with Python.h is not recommended. (If you do that, on PyPy and on some platforms like Windows, you may need to explicitly link to libpypy-c.dll to access the CPython C API compatibility layer; indeed, CFFI-generated modules on PyPy don’t link to libpypy-c.dll on their own. But really, don’t do that in the first place.)

[3] long double support:

We keep long double values inside a cdata object to avoid loosing precision. Normal Python floating-point numbers only contain enough precision for a double. If you really want to convert such an object to a regular Python float (i.e. a C double), call float(). If you need to do arithmetic on such numbers without any precision loss, you need instead to define and use a family of C functions like long double add(long double a, long double b);.

[4] Slicing with x[start:stop]:

Slicing is allowed, as long as you specify explicitly both start and stop (and don’t give any step). It gives a cdata object that is a “view” of all items from start to stop. It is a cdata of type “array” (so e.g. passing it as an argument to a C function would just convert it to a pointer to the start item). As with indexing, negative bounds mean really negative indices, like in C. As for slice assignment, it accepts any iterable, including a list of items or another array-like cdata object, but the length must match. (Note that this behavior differs from initialization: e.g. you can say chararray[10:15] = "hello", but the assigned string must be of exactly the correct length; no implicit null character is added.)

[5] Enums are handled like ints:

Like C, enum types are mostly int types (unsigned or signed, int or long; note that GCC’s first choice is unsigned). Reading an enum field of a structure, for example, returns you an integer. To compare their value symbolically, use code like if x.field == lib.FOO. If you really want to get their value as a string, use ffi.string(ffi.cast("the_enum_type", x.field)).

[6] bool() on a primitive cdata:

New in version 1.7. In previous versions, it only worked on pointers; for primitives it always returned True.

New in version 1.10: The C type _Bool or bool converts to Python booleans now. You get an exception if a C _Bool happens to contain a value different from 0 and 1 (this case triggers undefined behavior in C; if you really have to interface with a library relying on this, don’t use _Bool in the CFFI side). Also, when converting from a byte string to a _Bool[], only the bytes \x00 and \x01 are accepted.

[7] libffi does not support complex numbers:

New in version 1.11: CFFI now supports complex numbers directly. Note however that libffi does not. This means that C functions that take directly as argument types or return type a complex type cannot be called by CFFI, unless they are directly using the API mode.

[8] wchar_t, char16_t and char32_t

Support for FILE

You can declare C functions taking a FILE * argument and call them with a Python file object. If needed, you can also do c_f = ffi.cast("FILE *", fileobj) and then pass around c_f.

Note, however, that CFFI does this by a best-effort approach. If you need finer control over buffering, flushing, and timely closing of the FILE *, then you should not use this special support for FILE *. Instead, you can handle regular FILE * cdata objects that you explicitly make using fdopen(), like this:

ffi.cdef('''
    FILE *fdopen(int, const char *);   // from the C <stdio.h>
    int fclose(FILE *);
''')

myfile.flush()                    # make sure the file is flushed
newfd = os.dup(myfile.fileno())   # make a copy of the file descriptor
fp = lib.fdopen(newfd, "w")       # make a cdata 'FILE *' around newfd
lib.write_stuff_to_file(fp)       # invoke the external function
lib.fclose(fp)                    # when you're done, close fp (and newfd)

The special support for FILE * is anyway implemented in a similar manner on CPython 3.x and on PyPy, because these Python implementations’ files are not natively based on FILE *. Doing it explicity offers more control.

Unicode character types

The wchar_t type has the same signedness as the underlying platform’s. For example, on Linux, it is a signed 32-bit integer. However, the types char16_t and char32_t (new in version 1.11) are always unsigned.

Note that CFFI assumes that these types are meant to contain UTF-16 or UTF-32 characters in the native endianness. More precisely:

  • char32_t is assumed to contain UTF-32, or UCS4, which is just the unicode codepoint;
  • char16_t is assumed to contain UTF-16, i.e. UCS2 plus surrogates;
  • wchar_t is assumed to contain either UTF-32 or UTF-16 based on its actual platform-defined size of 4 or 2 bytes.

Whether this assumption is true or not is unspecified by the C language. In theory, the C library you are interfacing with could use one of these types with a different meaning. You would then need to handle it yourself—for example, by using uint32_t instead of char32_t in the cdef(), and building the expected arrays of uint32_t manually.

Python itself can be compiled with sys.maxunicode == 65535 or sys.maxunicode == 1114111 (Python >= 3.3 is always 1114111). This changes the handling of surrogates (which are pairs of 16-bit “characters” which actually stand for a single codepoint whose value is greater than 65535). If your Python is sys.maxunicode == 1114111, then it can store arbitrary unicode codepoints; surrogates are automatically inserted when converting from Python unicodes to UTF-16, and automatically removed when converting back. On the other hand, if your Python is sys.maxunicode == 65535, then it is the other way around: surrogates are removed when converting from Python unicodes to UTF-32, and added when converting back. In other words, surrogate conversion is done only when there is a size mismatch.

Note that Python’s internal representations is not specified. For example, on CPython >= 3.3, it will use 1- or 2- or 4-bytes arrays depending on what the string actually contains. With CFFI, when you pass a Python byte string to a C function expecting a char*, then we pass directly a pointer to the existing data without needing a temporary buffer; however, the same cannot cleanly be done with unicode string arguments and the wchar_t* / char16_t* / char32_t* types, because of the changing internal representation. As a result, and for consistency, CFFI always allocates a temporary buffer for unicode strings.

Warning: for now, if you use char16_t and char32_t with set_source(), you have to make sure yourself that the types are declared by the C source you provide to set_source(). They would be declared if you #include a library that explicitly uses them, for example, or when using C++11. Otherwise, you need #include <uchar.h> on Linux, or more generally something like typedef uint16_t char16_t;. This is not done automatically by CFFI because uchar.h is not standard across platforms, and writing a typedef like above would crash if the type happens to be already defined.