I have the following (in real life, the C code is much more complex, and I don't want to change it. It uses globals everywhere).:
from cffi import FFI
ffibuilder = FFI()
ffibuilder.set_source(
"mymodule",
r"""
#include <stdio.h>
float *x, *y, *z;
int n;
void some_func(){
int i;
for(i==0; i<n; i++) printf("%f %f %f\n", x[i], y[i], z[i]);
}
"""
)
ffibuilder.cdef(
"""
float *x, *y, *z;
int n;
void some_func();
"""
)
if __name__=="__main__":
ffibuilder.compile()
from mymodule import ffi, lib
import numpy as np
n = 4
lib.n = n
for i, k in enumerate(['x','y', 'z']):
v = i*np.arange(n, dtype=np.float32)
v.__repr__() # Need to do this for some reason!!
setattr(lib, k, ffi.cast('float*', ffi.from_buffer(v)))
lib.some_func()
The expected printed output (from some_func) is:
0.000000 0.000000 0.000000
0.000000 1.000000 2.000000
0.000000 2.000000 4.000000
0.000000 3.000000 6.000000
And that is indeed what I get. However, if I take out the line where I call v.__repr__(), I get the following:
0.000000 0.000000 0.000000
1.000000 1.000000 2.000000
2.000000 2.000000 4.000000
3.000000 3.000000 6.000000
i.e. it seems like the memory of x is either being overwritten by y, or is pointing to y. If I have only x and y (no z), then things work as expected.
Using double instead of float exhibits the same behaviour.
Any ideas on what I'm doing wrong?? Thanks!
Keep the array alive, otherwise they will be garbage collected:
arrs = []
for i, k in enumerate(['x','y', 'z']):
v = i*np.arange(n, dtype=np.float32)
arrs.append(v)
...
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