QLibrary#
The QLibrary
class loads shared libraries at runtime. More…
Synopsis#
Properties#
Functions#
def
errorString
()def
fileName
()def
isLoaded
()def
load
()def
loadHints
()def
resolve
(symbol)def
setFileName
(fileName)def
setFileNameAndVersion
(fileName, version)def
setFileNameAndVersion
(fileName, verNum)def
setLoadHints
(hints)def
unload
()
Static functions#
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
An instance of a QLibrary
object operates on a single shared object file (which we call a “library”, but is also known as a “DLL”). A QLibrary
provides access to the functionality in the library in a platform independent way. You can either pass a file name in the constructor, or set it explicitly with setFileName()
. When loading the library, QLibrary
searches in all the system-specific library locations (e.g. LD_LIBRARY_PATH
on Unix), unless the file name has an absolute path.
If the file name is an absolute path then an attempt is made to load this path first. If the file cannot be found, QLibrary
tries the name with different platform-specific file prefixes, like “lib” on Unix and Mac, and suffixes, like “.so” on Unix, “.dylib” on the Mac, or “.dll” on Windows.
If the file path is not absolute then QLibrary
modifies the search order to try the system-specific prefixes and suffixes first, followed by the file path specified.
This makes it possible to specify shared libraries that are only identified by their basename (i.e. without their suffix), so the same code will work on different operating systems yet still minimise the number of attempts to find the library.
The most important functions are load()
to dynamically load the library file, isLoaded()
to check whether loading was successful, and resolve()
to resolve a symbol in the library. The resolve()
function implicitly tries to load the library if it has not been loaded yet. Multiple instances of QLibrary
can be used to access the same physical library. Once loaded, libraries remain in memory until the application terminates. You can attempt to unload a library using unload()
, but if other instances of QLibrary
are using the same library, the call will fail, and unloading will only happen when every instance has called unload()
.
A typical use of QLibrary
is to resolve an exported symbol in a library, and to call the C function that this symbol represents. This is called “explicit linking” in contrast to “implicit linking”, which is done by the link step in the build process when linking an executable against a library.
The following code snippet loads a library, resolves the symbol “mysymbol”, and calls the function if everything succeeded. If something goes wrong, e.g. the library file does not exist or the symbol is not defined, the function pointer will be None
and won’t be called.
myLib = QLibrary("mylib") void = typedef(MyPrototype)() myFunction = (MyPrototype) myLib.resolve("mysymbol") if myFunction: myFunction()
The symbol must be exported as a C function from the library for resolve()
to work. This means that the function must be wrapped in an extern "C"
block if the library is compiled with a C++ compiler. On Windows, this also requires the use of a dllexport
macro; see resolve()
for the details of how this is done. For convenience, there is a static resolve()
function which you can use if you just want to call a function in a library without explicitly loading the library first:
void = typedef(MyPrototype)() myFunction = (MyPrototype) QLibrary.resolve("mylib", "mysymbol") if myFunction: myFunction()See also
- class PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary([parent=None])#
PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary(fileName[, parent=None])
PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary(fileName, version[, parent=None])
PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary(fileName, verNum[, parent=None])
- Parameters:
verNum – int
version – str
fileName – str
parent –
PySide6.QtCore.QObject
Constructs a library with the given parent
.
Constructs a library object with the given parent
that will load the library specified by fileName
.
We recommend omitting the file’s suffix in fileName
, since QLibrary
will automatically look for the file with the appropriate suffix in accordance with the platform, e.g. “.so” on Unix, “.dylib” on macOS and iOS, and “.dll” on Windows. (See fileName
.)
Constructs a library object with the given parent
that will load the library specified by fileName
and full version number version
. Currently, the version number is ignored on Windows.
We recommend omitting the file’s suffix in fileName
, since QLibrary
will automatically look for the file with the appropriate suffix in accordance with the platform, e.g. “.so” on Unix, “.dylib” on macOS and iOS, and “.dll” on Windows. (See fileName
.)
Constructs a library object with the given parent
that will load the library specified by fileName
and major version number verNum
. Currently, the version number is ignored on Windows.
We recommend omitting the file’s suffix in fileName
, since QLibrary
will automatically look for the file with the appropriate suffix in accordance with the platform, e.g. “.so” on Unix, “.dylib” on macOS and iOS, and “.dll” on Windows. (See fileName
.)
Note
Properties can be used directly when from __feature__ import true_property
is used or via accessor functions otherwise.
- property PᅟySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.fileName: str#
This property holds the file name of the library.
We recommend omitting the file’s suffix in the file name, since QLibrary
will automatically look for the file with the appropriate suffix (see isLibrary()
).
When loading the library, QLibrary
searches in all system-specific library locations (for example, LD_LIBRARY_PATH
on Unix), unless the file name has an absolute path. After loading the library successfully, fileName() returns the fully-qualified file name of the library, including the full path to the library if one was given in the constructor or passed to setFileName().
For example, after successfully loading the “GL” library on Unix platforms, fileName() will return “libGL.so”. If the file name was originally passed as “/usr/lib/libGL”, fileName() will return “/usr/lib/libGL.so”.
- Access functions:
fileName
()setFileName
(fileName)
- property PᅟySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.loadHints: LoadHints#
This property holds Give the load()
function some hints on how it should behave..
You can give some hints on how the symbols are resolved. Usually, the symbols are not resolved at load time, but resolved lazily, (that is, when resolve()
is called). If you set the loadHints to ResolveAllSymbolsHint
, then all symbols will be resolved at load time if the platform supports it.
Setting ExportExternalSymbolsHint
will make the external symbols in the library available for resolution in subsequent loaded libraries.
If LoadArchiveMemberHint
is set, the file name is composed of two components: A path which is a reference to an archive file followed by the second component which is the reference to the archive member. For instance, the fileName
libGL.a(shr_64.o)
will refer to the library shr_64.o
in the archive file named libGL.a
. This is only supported on the AIX platform.
The interpretation of the load hints is platform dependent, and if you use it you are probably making some assumptions on which platform you are compiling for, so use them only if you understand the consequences of them.
By default, none of these flags are set, so libraries will be loaded with lazy symbol resolution, and will not export external symbols for resolution in other dynamically-loaded libraries.
Note
Setting this property after the library has been loaded has no effect and loadHints() will not reflect those changes.
Note
This property is shared among all QLibrary
instances that refer to the same library.
- Access functions:
loadHints
()setLoadHints
(hints)
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.LoadHint#
(inherits enum.Flag
) This enum describes the possible hints that can be used to change the way libraries are handled when they are loaded. These values indicate how symbols are resolved when libraries are loaded, and are specified using the setLoadHints()
function.
Constant
Description
QLibrary.ResolveAllSymbolsHint
Causes all symbols in a library to be resolved when it is loaded, not simply when
resolve()
is called.QLibrary.ExportExternalSymbolsHint
Exports unresolved and external symbols in the library so that they can be resolved in other dynamically-loaded libraries loaded later.
QLibrary.LoadArchiveMemberHint
Allows the file name of the library to specify a particular object file within an archive file. If this hint is given, the filename of the library consists of a path, which is a reference to an archive file, followed by a reference to the archive member.
QLibrary.PreventUnloadHint
Prevents the library from being unloaded from the address space if close() is called. The library’s static variables are not reinitialized if open() is called at a later time.
QLibrary.DeepBindHint
Instructs the linker to prefer definitions in the loaded library over exported definitions in the loading application when resolving external symbols in the loaded library. This option is only supported on Linux.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.LoadStatusTag#
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.errorString()#
- Return type:
str
Returns a text string with the description of the last error that occurred. Currently, errorString will only be set if load()
, unload()
or resolve()
for some reason fails.
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.fileName()#
- Return type:
str
See also
Getter of property fileName
.
- static PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.isLibrary(fileName)#
- Parameters:
fileName – str
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if fileName
has a valid suffix for a loadable library; otherwise returns false
.
Platform
Valid suffixes
Windows
.dll
,.DLL
Unix/Linux
.so
AIX
.a
HP-UX
.sl
,.so
(HP-UXi)macOS and iOS
.dylib
,.bundle
,.so
Trailing versioning numbers on Unix are ignored.
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.isLoaded()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if the library is loaded; otherwise returns false
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.load()#
- Return type:
bool
Loads the library and returns true
if the library was loaded successfully; otherwise returns false
. Since resolve()
always calls this function before resolving any symbols it is not necessary to call it explicitly. In some situations you might want the library loaded in advance, in which case you would use this function.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.loadHints()#
- Return type:
LoadHints
See also
Getter of property loadHints
.
- static PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.resolve(fileName, version, symbol)#
- Parameters:
fileName – str
version – str
symbol – str
- Return type:
QFunctionPointer
This is an overloaded function.
Loads the library fileName
with full version number version
and returns the address of the exported symbol symbol
. Note that fileName
should not include the platform-specific file suffix; (see fileName
). The library remains loaded until the application exits. version
is ignored on Windows.
The function returns None
if the symbol could not be resolved or if the library could not be loaded.
See also
- static PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.resolve(fileName, symbol)
- Parameters:
fileName – str
symbol – str
- Return type:
QFunctionPointer
This is an overloaded function.
Loads the library fileName
and returns the address of the exported symbol symbol
. Note that fileName
should not include the platform-specific file suffix; (see fileName
). The library remains loaded until the application exits.
The function returns None
if the symbol could not be resolved or if the library could not be loaded.
See also
- static PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.resolve(fileName, verNum, symbol)
- Parameters:
fileName – str
verNum – int
symbol – str
- Return type:
QFunctionPointer
This is an overloaded function.
Loads the library fileName
with major version number verNum
and returns the address of the exported symbol symbol
. Note that fileName
should not include the platform-specific file suffix; (see fileName
). The library remains loaded until the application exits. verNum
is ignored on Windows.
The function returns None
if the symbol could not be resolved or if the library could not be loaded.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.resolve(symbol)
- Parameters:
symbol – str
- Return type:
QFunctionPointer
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Returns the address of the exported symbol symbol
. The library is loaded if necessary. The function returns None
if the symbol could not be resolved or if the library could not be loaded.
Example:
typedef int (AvgFunction)(int, int) avg = (AvgFunction) library.resolve("avg") if avg: return avg(5, 8) else: return -1
The symbol must be exported as a C function from the library. This means that the function must be wrapped in an extern "C"
if the library is compiled with a C++ compiler. On Windows you must also explicitly export the function from the DLL using the __declspec(dllexport)
compiler directive, for example:
extern "C" MY_EXPORT int avg(int a, int b) return (a + b) / 2
with MY_EXPORT
defined as
#ifdef Q_OS_WIN #define MY_EXPORT __declspec(dllexport) #else #define MY_EXPORT #endif
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.setFileName(fileName)#
- Parameters:
fileName – str
See also
Setter of property fileName
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.setFileNameAndVersion(fileName, version)#
- Parameters:
fileName – str
version – str
Sets the fileName
property and full version number to fileName
and version
respectively. The version
parameter is ignored on Windows.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.setFileNameAndVersion(fileName, verNum)
- Parameters:
fileName – str
verNum – int
Sets the fileName
property and major version number to fileName
and versionNumber
respectively. The versionNumber
is ignored on Windows.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.setLoadHints(hints)#
- Parameters:
hints –
LoadHints
See also
Setter of property loadHints
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QLibrary.unload()#
- Return type:
bool
Unloads the library and returns true
if the library could be unloaded; otherwise returns false
.
This happens automatically on application termination, so you shouldn’t normally need to call this function.
If other instances of QLibrary
are using the same library, the call will fail, and unloading will only happen when every instance has called unload().
Note that on Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), dynamic libraries cannot be unloaded.