Question or problem about Python programming:
I’m trying to speed up the answer here using Cython. I try to compile the code (after doing the cygwinccompiler.py hack explained here), but get a fatal error: numpy/arrayobject.h: No such file or directory…compilation terminated error. Can anyone tell me if it’s a problem with my code, or some esoteric subtlety with Cython?
Below is my code.
import numpy as np import scipy as sp cimport numpy as np cimport cython cdef inline np.ndarray[np.int, ndim=1] fbincount(np.ndarray[np.int_t, ndim=1] x): cdef int m = np.amax(x)+1 cdef int n = x.size cdef unsigned int i cdef np.ndarray[np.int_t, ndim=1] c = np.zeros(m, dtype=np.int) for i in xrange(n): c[x[i]] += 1 return c cdef packed struct Point: np.float64_t f0, f1 @cython.boundscheck(False) def sparsemaker(np.ndarray[np.float_t, ndim=2] X not None, np.ndarray[np.float_t, ndim=2] Y not None, np.ndarray[np.float_t, ndim=2] Z not None): cdef np.ndarray[np.float64_t, ndim=1] counts, factor cdef np.ndarray[np.int_t, ndim=1] row, col, repeats cdef np.ndarray[Point] indices cdef int x_, y_ _, row = np.unique(X, return_inverse=True); x_ = _.size _, col = np.unique(Y, return_inverse=True); y_ = _.size indices = np.rec.fromarrays([row,col]) _, repeats = np.unique(indices, return_inverse=True) counts = 1. / fbincount(repeats) Z.flat *= counts.take(repeats) return sp.sparse.csr_matrix((Z.flat,(row,col)), shape=(x_, y_)).toarray()
How to solve the problem:
Solution 1:
In your setup.py
, the Extension
should have the argument include_dirs=[numpy.get_include()]
.
Also, you are missing np.import_array()
in your code.
—
Example setup.py:
from distutils.core import setup, Extension from Cython.Build import cythonize import numpy setup( ext_modules=[ Extension("my_module", ["my_module.c"], include_dirs=[numpy.get_include()]), ], ) # Or, if you use cythonize() to make the ext_modules list, # include_dirs can be passed to setup() setup( ext_modules=cythonize("my_module.pyx"), include_dirs=[numpy.get_include()] )
Solution 2:
For a one-file project like yours, another alternative is to use pyximport
. You don’t need to create a setup.py
… you don’t need to even open a command line if you use IPython … it’s all very convenient. In your case, try running these commands in IPython or in a normal Python script:
import numpy import pyximport pyximport.install(setup_args={"script_args":["--compiler=mingw32"], "include_dirs":numpy.get_include()}, reload_support=True) import my_pyx_module print my_pyx_module.some_function(...) ...
You may need to edit the compiler of course. This makes import and reload work the same for .pyx
files as they work for .py
files.
Source: http://wiki.cython.org/InstallingOnWindows
Solution 3:
The error means that a numpy header file isn’t being found during compilation.
Try doing export CFLAGS=-I/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/numpy/core/include/
, and then compiling. This is a problem with a few different packages. There’s a bug filed in ArchLinux for the same issue: https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/22326
Solution 4:
Simple answer
A way simpler way is to add the path to your file distutils.cfg
. It’s path behalf of Windows 7 is by default C:\Python27\Lib\distutils\
. You just assert the following contents and it should work out:
[build_ext] include_dirs= C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\numpy\core\include
Entire config file
To give you an example how the config file could look like, my entire file reads:
[build] compiler = mingw32 [build_ext] include_dirs= C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\numpy\core\include compiler = mingw32
Solution 5:
It should be able to do it within cythonize()
function as mentioned here, but it doesn’t work beacuse there is a known issue