git-svn-id: https://swig.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/swig/trunk@10584 626c5289-ae23-0410-ae9c-e8d60b6d4f22
545 lines
24 KiB
Text
545 lines
24 KiB
Text
SWIG (Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator)
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Version: 1.3.36 (24 June 2008)
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Tagline: SWIG is a compiler that integrates C and C++ with languages
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including Perl, Python, Tcl, Ruby, PHP, Java, Ocaml, Lua,
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Scheme (Guile, MzScheme, CHICKEN), Pike, C#, Modula-3,
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Common Lisp (CLISP, Allegro CL, CFFI, UFFI), Octave and R.
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SWIG reads annotated C/C++ header files and creates wrapper code (glue
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code) in order to make the corresponding C/C++ libraries available to
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the listed languages, or to extend C/C++ programs with a scripting
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language.
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This distribution represents the latest development release of SWIG.
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The guilty parties working on this are:
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Active Developers:
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William Fulton (wsf@fultondesigns.co.uk) (SWIG core, Java, C#, Windows, Cygwin)
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Olly Betts (olly@survex.com) (PHP)
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John Lenz (Guile, MzScheme updates, Chicken module, runtime system)
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Mark Gossage (mark@gossage.cjb.net) (Lua)
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Joseph Wang (joe@gnacademy.org) (R)
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Gonzalo Garramuno (ggarra@advancedsl.com.ar) (Ruby, Ruby's UTL)
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Xavier Delacour (xavier.delacour@gmail.com) (Octave)
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Major contributors include:
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Dave Beazley (dave-swig@dabeaz.com) (SWIG core, Python, Tcl, Perl)
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Henning Thielemann (swig@henning-thielemann.de) (Modula3)
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Matthias Köppe (mkoeppe@mail.math.uni-magdeburg.de) (Guile, MzScheme)
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Luigi Ballabio (luigi.ballabio@fastwebnet.it) (STL wrapping)
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Mikel Bancroft (mikel@franz.com) (Allegro CL)
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Surendra Singhi (efuzzyone@netscape.net) (CLISP, CFFI)
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Marcelo Matus (mmatus@acms.arizona.edu) (SWIG core, Python, UTL[python,perl,tcl,ruby])
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Art Yerkes (ayerkes@speakeasy.net) (Ocaml)
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Lyle Johnson (lyle@users.sourceforge.net) (Ruby)
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Charlie Savage (cfis@interserv.com) (Ruby)
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Thien-Thi Nguyen (ttn@glug.org) (build/test/misc)
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Richard Palmer (richard@magicality.org) (PHP)
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Sam Liddicott - Anonova Ltd (saml@liddicott.com) (PHP)
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Tim Hockin - Sun Microsystems (thockin@sun.com) (PHP)
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Kevin Ruland (PHP)
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Shibukawa Yoshiki (Japanese Translation)
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Jason Stewart (jason@openinformatics.com) (Perl5)
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Loic Dachary (Perl5)
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David Fletcher (Perl5)
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Gary Holt (Perl5)
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Masaki Fukushima (Ruby)
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Scott Michel (scottm@cs.ucla.edu) (Java directors)
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Tiger Feng (songyanf@cs.uchicago.edu) (SWIG core)
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Mark Rose (mrose@stm.lbl.gov) (Directors)
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Jonah Beckford (beckford@usermail.com) (CHICKEN)
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Ahmon Dancy (dancy@franz.com) (Allegro CL)
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Dirk Gerrits (Allegro CL)
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Neil Cawse (C#)
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Harco de Hilster (Java)
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Alexey Dyachenko (dyachenko@fromru.com) (Tcl)
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Bob Techentin (Tcl)
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Martin Froehlich <MartinFroehlich@ACM.org> (Guile)
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Marcio Luis Teixeira <marciot@holly.colostate.edu> (Guile)
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Duncan Temple Lang (R)
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Past contributors include:
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James Michael DuPont, Clark McGrew, Dustin Mitchell, Ian Cooke, Catalin Dumitrescu, Baran
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Kovuk, Oleg Tolmatcev, Tal Shalif, Lluis Padro, Chris Seatory, Igor Bely, Robin Dunn
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(See CHANGES for a more complete list).
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Portions also copyrighted by companies/corporations;
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Network Applied Communication Laboratory, Inc
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Information-technology Promotion Agency, Japan
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Up-to-date SWIG related information can be found at
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http://www.swig.org
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A SWIG FAQ and other hints can be found on the SWIG Wiki:
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http://www.dabeaz.com/cgi-bin/wiki.pl
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! IMPORTANT !!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! !!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! Previous SWIG-1.1 users should read the documentation !!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! file Doc/Manual/SWIG.html before trying to use SWIG-1.3!!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! on existing SWIG interfaces. This is the most current !!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! documentation that describes new 1.3 features and !!!!!!!
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!!!!!!! incompatibilities. !!!!!!!
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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What's New?
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===========
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SWIG-1.3.36 summary:
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- Enhancement to directors to wrap all protected members
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- Optimisation feature for objects returned by value
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- A few bugs fixes in the PHP, Java, Ruby, R, C#, Python, Lua and
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Perl modules
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- Other minor generic bug fixes
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SWIG-1.3.35 summary:
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- Octave language module added
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- Bug fixes in Python, Lua, Java, C#, Perl modules
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- A few other generic bugs and runtime assertions fixed
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SWIG-1.3.34 summary:
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- shared_ptr support for Python
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- Support for latest R - version 2.6
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- Various minor improvements/bug fixes for R, Lua, Python, Java, C#
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- A few other generic bug fixes, mainly for templates and using statements
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SWIG-1.3.33 summary:
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- Fix regression for Perl where C++ wrappers would not compile
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- Fix regression parsing macros
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SWIG-1.3.32 summary:
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- shared_ptr support for Java and C#
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- Enhanced STL support for Ruby
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- Windows support for R
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- Fixed long-standing memory leak in PHP Module
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- Numerous fixes and minor enhancements for Allegrocl, C#, cffi, Chicken, Guile,
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Java, Lua, Ocaml, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Tcl.
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- Improved warning support
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SWIG-1.3.31 summary:
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- Python modern classes regression fix
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SWIG-1.3.30 summary:
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- Python-2.5 support
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- New language module: R
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- Director support added for C#
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- Numerous director fixes and improvements
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- Improved mingw/msys support
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- Better constants support in Guile and chicken modules
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- Support for generating PHP5 class wrappers
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- Important Java premature garbage collection fix
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- Minor improvements/fixes in cffi, php, allegrocl, perl, chicken, lua, ruby,
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ocaml, python, java, c# and guile language modules
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- Many many other bug fixes
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SWIG-1.3.29 summary:
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- Numerous important bug fixes
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- Few minor new features
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- Some performance improvements in generated code for Python
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SWIG-1.3.28 summary:
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- More powerful renaming (%rename) capability.
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- More user friendly warning handling.
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- Add finer control for default constructors and destructors. We discourage
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the use of the 'nodefault' option, which disables both constructors and
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destructors, leading to possible memory leaks. Use instead 'nodefaultctor'
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and/or 'nodefaultdtor'.
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- Automatic copy constructor wrapper generation via the 'copyctor' option/feature.
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- Better handling of Windows extensions and types.
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- Better runtime error reporting.
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- Add the %catches directive to catch and dispatch exceptions.
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- Add the %naturalvar directive for more 'natural' variable wrapping.
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- Better default handling of std::string variables using the %naturalvar directive.
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- Add the %allowexcept and %exceptionvar directives to handle exceptions when
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accessing a variable.
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- Add the %delobject directive to mark methods that act like destructors.
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- Add the -fastdispatch option to enable smaller and faster overload dispatch
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mechanism.
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- Template support for %rename, %feature and %typemap improved.
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- Add/doc more debug options, such as -dump_module, -debug_typemaps, etc.
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- Unified typemap library (UTL) potentially providing core typemaps for all
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scripting languages based on the recently evolving Python typemaps.
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- New language module: Common Lisp with CFFI.
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- Python, Ruby, Perl and Tcl use the new UTL, many old reported and hidden
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errors with typemaps are now fixed.
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- Initial Java support for languages using the UTL via GCJ, you can now use
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Java libraries in your favorite script language using gcj + swig.
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- Tcl support for std::wstring.
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- PHP4 module update, many error fixes and actively maintained again.
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- Allegrocl support for C++, also enhanced C support.
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- Ruby support for bang methods.
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- Ruby support for user classes as native exceptions.
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- Perl improved dispatching in overloaded functions via the new cast and rank
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mechanism.
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- Perl improved backward compatibility, 5.004 and later tested and working.
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- Python improved backward compatibility, 1.5.2 and later tested and working.
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- Python can use the same cast/rank mechanism via the -castmode option.
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- Python implicit conversion mechanism similar to C++, via the %implicitconv
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directive (replaces and improves the implicit.i library).
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- Python threading support added.
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- Python STL support improved, iterators are supported and STL containers can
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use now the native PyObject type.
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- Python many performance options and improvements, try the -O option to test
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all of them. Python runtime benchmarks show up to 20 times better performance
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compared to 1.3.27 and older versions.
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- Python support for 'multi-inheritance' on the python side.
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- Python simplified proxy classes, now swig doesn't need to generate the
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additional 'ClassPtr' classes.
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- Python extended support for smart pointers.
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- Python better support for static member variables.
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- Python backward compatibility improved, many projects that used to work
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only with swig-1.3.21 to swig-1.3.24 are working again with swig-1.3.28
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- Python test-suite is now 'valgrinded' before release, and swig also
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reports memory leaks due to missing destructors.
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- Minor bug fixes and improvements to the Lua, Ruby, Java, C#, Python, Guile,
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Chicken, Tcl and Perl modules.
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SWIG-1.3.27 summary:
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- Fix bug in anonymous typedef structures which was leading to strange behaviour
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SWIG-1.3.26 summary:
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- New language modules: Lua, CLISP and Common Lisp with UFFI.
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- Big overhaul to the PHP module.
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- Change to the way 'extern' is handled.
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- Minor bug fixes specific to C#, Java, Modula3, Ocaml, Allegro CL,
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XML, Lisp s-expressions, Tcl, Ruby and Python modules.
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- Other minor improvements and bug fixes.
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SWIG-1.3.25 summary:
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- Improved runtime type system. Speed of module loading improved in
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modules with lots of types. SWIG_RUNTIME_VERSION has been increased
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from 1 to 2, but the API is exactly the same; only internal changes
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were made.
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- The languages that use the runtime type system now support external
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access to the runtime type system.
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- Various improvements with typemaps and template handling.
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- Fewer warnings in generated code.
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- Improved colour documentation.
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- Many C# module improvements (exception handling, prevention of early
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garbage collection, C# attributes support added, more flexible type
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marshalling/asymmetric types.)
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- Minor improvements and bug fixes specific to the C#, Java, TCL, Guile,
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Chicken, MzScheme, Perl, Php, Python, Ruby and Ocaml modules).
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- Various other bug fixes and memory leak fixes.
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SWIG-1.3.24 summary:
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- Improved enum handling
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- More runtime library options
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- More bugs fixes for templates and template default arguments, directors
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and other areas.
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- Better smart pointer support, including data members, static members
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and %extend.
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SWIG-1.3.23 summary:
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- Improved support for callbacks
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- Python docstring support and better error handling
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- C++ default argument support for Java and C# added.
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- Improved c++ default argument support for the scripting languages plus
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option to use original (compact) default arguments.
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- %feature and %ignore/%rename bug fixes and mods - they might need default
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arguments specified to maintain compatible behaviour when using the new
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default arguments wrapping.
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- Runtime library changes: Runtime code can now exist in more than one module
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and so need not be compiled into just one module
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- Further improved support for templates and namespaces
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- Overloaded templated function support added
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- More powerful default typemaps (mixed default typemaps)
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- Some important %extend and director code bug fixes
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- Guile now defaults to using SCM API. The old interface can be obtained by
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the -gh option.
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- Various minor improvements and bug fixes for C#, Chicken, Guile, Java,
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MzScheme, Perl, Python and Ruby
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- Improved dependencies generation for constructing Makefiles.
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SWIG-1.3.22 summary:
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- Improved exception handling and translation of C errors or C++
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exceptions into target language exceptions.
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- Improved enum support, mapping to built-in Java 1.5 enums and C#
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enums or the typesafe enum pattern for these two languages.
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- Python - much better STL suppport and support for std::wstring,
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wchar_t and FILE *.
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- Initial support for Modula3 and Allegro CL.
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- 64 bit TCL support.
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- Java and C#'s proxy classes are now nearly 100% generated from
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typemaps and/or features for finer control on the generated code.
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- SWIG runtime library support deprecation.
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- Improved documentation. SWIG now additionally provides documentation
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in the form of a single HTML page as well as a pdf document.
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- Enhanced C++ friend declaration support.
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- Better support for reference counted classes.
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- Various %fragment improvements.
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- RPM fixes.
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- Various minor improvements and bug fixes for C#, Chicken, Guile, Java,
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MzScheme, Perl, Php, Python, Ruby and XML.
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The SWIG-1.3.x development releases offer a huge number of improvements
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over older SWIG-1.1 releases. These improvements include:
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- Support for C++ overloaded functions and methods.
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- Support for C++ smart pointers.
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- Support for C++ namespaces
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- Support for C++ overloaded operators.
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- Support for C++ templates including member templates.
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- Support for C++ template specialization and partial specialization.
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- Support for C++ friend declarations.
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- Parsing support for almost all C/C++ datatypes.
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- Automatic translation of C++ exception specifiers.
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- Contract support.
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- A full C preprocessor with macro expansion. Includes C99 variadic macros.
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- Java, Ruby, MzScheme, PHP4, OCAML, Pike, CHICKEN, XML and C# modules
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added. Guile module improved.
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- Director support - upcalls for C++ virtual functions into the target
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language proxy class.
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- Better code generation. SWIG is better able to make optimizations
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in order to generate less code.
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- Testing framework part of the distribution ("make -k check" support).
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- A lot of minor bug fixes and cleanup.
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- Better Windows support.
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If you used SWIG-1.1, a number of old features are missing from SWIG-1.3.
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- The SWIG-1.1 documentation system is gone and hasn't been
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replaced yet. This is on the long-term to-do list.
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- The Tcl7.x and Perl4 modules are deprecated and no longer
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included.
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- A wide variety of old SWIG command-line options and
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obscure features are gone.
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- A lot of old %pragma directives and obscure undocumented
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customization features have been eliminated. The same
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functionality is now available through other means.
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- Objective C support doesn't work right now. No ETA as to
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when it will return.
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Although we are making some attempt to preserve backwards
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compatibility with interfaces written for SWIG-1.1, SWIG-1.3
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incorporates a number of very substantial modifications to type
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handling, typemaps, and wrapper code generation. Therefore, if you
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are making extensive use of advanced SWIG features, interfaces written
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for SWIG-1.1 may not work. We apologize for the inconvenience, but
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these changes are needed in order to fix a number of annoying
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"features" in SWIG-1.1. Hopefully the list of new features will
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provide enough incentive for you to upgrade (and that the
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modifications to your interfaces will only be minor).
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In addition, SWIG-1.3 makes no attempt to be compatible with SWIG-1.1 at
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the C++ API level so language modules written for SWIG-1.1 will most
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definitely not work with this release.
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See the documentation for details of the SWIG_VERSION preprocessor
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symbol if you have backward compatibility issues and need to use more
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than one version of SWIG.
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The files NEW and CHANGES describe in some detail all of the important
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changes that have been made to the system. Experienced users would be
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well advised to read this.
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Release Notes
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=============
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Please see the CHANGES files for a detailed list of bug fixes and
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new features. A summary of the changes is included in this README file.
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Windows Installation
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====================
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Please see the Doc/Manual/Windows.html file for instructions on installing
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SWIG on Windows and running the examples. The Windows distribution is
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called swigwin and includes a prebuilt SWIG executable, swig.exe, included in
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the same directory as this README file. Otherwise it is exactly the same as
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the main SWIG distribution. There is no need to download anything else.
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Unix Installation
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=================
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You must use GNU `make' to build SWIG.
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http://www.gnu.org/software/make/
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To build and install SWIG, simply type the following:
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% ./configure
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% make
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% make install
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By default SWIG installs itself in /usr/local. If you need to install SWIG in
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a different location or in your home directory, use the --prefix option
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to ./configure. For example:
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% ./configure --prefix=/home/yourname/projects
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% make
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% make install
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Note: the directory given to --prefix must be an absolute pathname. Do *NOT* use
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the ~ shell-escape to refer to your home directory. SWIG won't work properly
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if you do this.
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The file INSTALL details more about using configure. Also try
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% ./configure --help.
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The configure script will attempt to locate various packages on your machine
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including Tcl, Perl5, Python and all the other target languages that SWIG
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uses. Don't panic if you get 'not found' messages--SWIG does not need these
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packages to compile or run. The configure script is actually looking for
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these packages so that you can try out the SWIG examples contained
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in the 'Examples' directory without having to hack Makefiles.
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Please see the Documentation section below on installing documentation as
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none is installed by default.
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SWIG used to include a set of runtime libraries for some languages for working
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with multiple modules. These are no longer built during the installation stage.
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However, users can build them just like any wrapper module as described in
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the documentation, Doc/Manual/Modules.html. The CHANGES file also lists some
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examples which build the runtime library.
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Notes:
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(1) If you checked the code out via SVN, you will have to run ./autogen.sh
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before typing 'configure'. In addition, a full build of SWIG requires
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the use of bison.
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Macintosh OS X Installation
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============================
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SWIG is known to work on various flavors of OS X. Follow the Unix installation
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instructions above. However, as of this writing, there is still great deal of
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inconsistency with how shared libaries are handled by various scripting languages
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on OS X. We've tried to resolve these differences to the extent of our knowledge.
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This release was most recently checked with the Panther release of OS X on a
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Macintosh G5 system. Your mileage may vary.
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Users of OS X should be aware that Darwin handles shared libraries and linking in
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a radically different way than most Unix systems. In order to test SWIG and run
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the examples, SWIG configures itself to use flat namespaces and to allow undefined
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symbols (-flat_namespace -undefined suppress). This mostly closely follows the Unix
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model and makes it more likely that the SWIG examples will work with whatever
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installation of software you might have. However, this is generally not the recommended
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technique for building larger extension modules. Instead, you should utilize
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Darwin's two-level namespaces. Some details about this can be found here
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http://developer.apple.com/documentation/ReleaseNotes/DeveloperTools/TwoLevelNamespaces.html
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Needless to say, you might have to experiment a bit to get things working at first.
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Testing
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=======
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If you want to test SWIG before installation, type the following:
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% make -k check
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'make -k check' requires at least one of the target languages to be
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installed. If it fails, it may mean that you have an uninstalled
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language module or that the file 'Examples/Makefile' has been
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incorrectly configured. It may also fail due to compiler issues such
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as broken C++ compiler. Even if 'make -k check' fails, there is a
|
|
pretty good chance SWIG still works correctly---you will just have to
|
|
mess around with one of the examples and some makefiles to get it to work.
|
|
|
|
The testing suite executed by 'make -k check' is designed to stress-test
|
|
many parts of the implementation including obscure corner cases. If some
|
|
of these tests fail or generate warning messages, there is no reason for
|
|
alarm---the test may be related to some new SWIG feature or a difficult bug
|
|
that we're trying to resolve. Chances are that SWIG will work just fine
|
|
for you. Note that if you have more than one CPU/core, then you can use
|
|
parallel make can be used to speed up the check as it does take quite some
|
|
time to run, for example:
|
|
|
|
% make -j2 -k check
|
|
|
|
Also, SWIG's support for C++ is sufficiently advanced that certain
|
|
tests may fail on older C++ compilers (for instance if your compiler
|
|
does not support member templates). These errors are harmless if you
|
|
don't intend to use these features in your own programs.
|
|
|
|
Note: The test-suite currently contains around 250 tests. If you
|
|
have many different target languages installed and a slow machine, it
|
|
might take more than an hour to run the test-suite.
|
|
|
|
Examples
|
|
========
|
|
The Examples directory contains a variety of examples of using SWIG
|
|
and it has some browsable documentation. Simply point your browser to
|
|
the file "Example/index.html".
|
|
|
|
The Examples directory also includes Visual C++ project (.dsp) files for
|
|
building some of the examples on Windows.
|
|
|
|
Known Issues
|
|
============
|
|
There are minor known bugs, details of which are in the bug tracker, see
|
|
http://www.swig.org/bugs.html.
|
|
|
|
Troubleshooting
|
|
===============
|
|
In order to operate correctly, SWIG relies upon a set of library
|
|
files. If after building SWIG, you get error messages like this,
|
|
|
|
% swig foo.i
|
|
:1. Unable to find 'swig.swg'
|
|
:3. Unable to find 'tcl8.swg'
|
|
|
|
it means that SWIG has either been incorrectly configured or
|
|
installed. To fix this:
|
|
|
|
1. Make sure you remembered to do a 'make install' and that
|
|
the installation actually worked. Make sure you have
|
|
write permission on the install directory.
|
|
|
|
2. If that doesn't work, type 'swig -swiglib' to find out
|
|
where SWIG thinks its library is located.
|
|
|
|
3. If the location is not where you expect, perhaps
|
|
you supplied a bad option to configure. Use
|
|
./configure --prefix=pathname to set the SWIG install
|
|
location. Also, make sure you don't include a shell
|
|
escape character such as ~ when you specify the path.
|
|
|
|
4. The SWIG library can be changed by setting the SWIG_LIB
|
|
environment variable. However, you really shouldn't
|
|
have to do this.
|
|
|
|
If you are having other troubles, you might look at the SWIG Wiki at
|
|
http://www.dabeaz.com/cgi-bin/wiki.pl.
|
|
|
|
Documentation
|
|
=============
|
|
The Doc/Manual directory contains the most recent set of updated
|
|
documentation for this release. The documentation is available in
|
|
three different formats, each of which contains identical content.
|
|
These format are, pdf (SWIGDocumentation.pdf), single
|
|
page html (Doc/Manual/SWIGDocumentation.html) or multiple page html
|
|
(other files in Doc/Manual). Please select your chosen format and
|
|
copy/install to wherever takes your fancy.
|
|
|
|
This is a development release and the documentation is largely, but
|
|
not entirely up to date. We are working on it, but there
|
|
was a lot of old documentation and it is taking some time to
|
|
update and complete. Please be patient or volunteer to help.
|
|
|
|
There is some technical developer documentation available in the
|
|
Doc/Devel subdirectory. This is not necessarily up-to-date, but it
|
|
has some information on SWIG internals.
|
|
|
|
Participate!
|
|
============
|
|
Please report any errors and submit patches (if possible)! We only
|
|
have access to a limited variety of hardware (Linux, Solaris, OS-X,
|
|
and Windows). All contributions help.
|
|
|
|
If you would like to join the SWIG development team or contribute a
|
|
language module to the distribution, please contact the swig-dev
|
|
mailing list, details at http://www.swig.org/mail.html.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- The SWIG Maintainers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|