""" Define @jit and related decorators. """ import sys import warnings import inspect import logging from numba.core.errors import DeprecationError, NumbaDeprecationWarning from numba.stencils.stencil import stencil from numba.core import config, extending, sigutils, registry _logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Decorators _msg_deprecated_signature_arg = ("Deprecated keyword argument `{0}`. " "Signatures should be passed as the first " "positional argument.") def jit(signature_or_function=None, locals={}, cache=False, pipeline_class=None, boundscheck=None, **options): """ This decorator is used to compile a Python function into native code. Args ----- signature_or_function: The (optional) signature or list of signatures to be compiled. If not passed, required signatures will be compiled when the decorated function is called, depending on the argument values. As a convenience, you can directly pass the function to be compiled instead. locals: dict Mapping of local variable names to Numba types. Used to override the types deduced by Numba's type inference engine. pipeline_class: type numba.compiler.CompilerBase The compiler pipeline type for customizing the compilation stages. options: For a cpu target, valid options are: nopython: bool Set to True to disable the use of PyObjects and Python API calls. The default behavior is to allow the use of PyObjects and Python API. Default value is False. forceobj: bool Set to True to force the use of PyObjects for every value. Default value is False. looplift: bool Set to True to enable jitting loops in nopython mode while leaving surrounding code in object mode. This allows functions to allocate NumPy arrays and use Python objects, while the tight loops in the function can still be compiled in nopython mode. Any arrays that the tight loop uses should be created before the loop is entered. Default value is True. error_model: str The error-model affects divide-by-zero behavior. Valid values are 'python' and 'numpy'. The 'python' model raises exception. The 'numpy' model sets the result to *+/-inf* or *nan*. Default value is 'python'. inline: str or callable The inline option will determine whether a function is inlined at into its caller if called. String options are 'never' (default) which will never inline, and 'always', which will always inline. If a callable is provided it will be called with the call expression node that is requesting inlining, the caller's IR and callee's IR as arguments, it is expected to return Truthy as to whether to inline. NOTE: This inlining is performed at the Numba IR level and is in no way related to LLVM inlining. boundscheck: bool or None Set to True to enable bounds checking for array indices. Out of bounds accesses will raise IndexError. The default is to not do bounds checking. If False, bounds checking is disabled, out of bounds accesses can produce garbage results or segfaults. However, enabling bounds checking will slow down typical functions, so it is recommended to only use this flag for debugging. You can also set the NUMBA_BOUNDSCHECK environment variable to 0 or 1 to globally override this flag. The default value is None, which under normal execution equates to False, but if debug is set to True then bounds checking will be enabled. Returns -------- A callable usable as a compiled function. Actual compiling will be done lazily if no explicit signatures are passed. Examples -------- The function can be used in the following ways: 1) jit(signatures, **targetoptions) -> jit(function) Equivalent to: d = dispatcher(function, targetoptions) for signature in signatures: d.compile(signature) Create a dispatcher object for a python function. Then, compile the function with the given signature(s). Example: @jit("int32(int32, int32)") def foo(x, y): return x + y @jit(["int32(int32, int32)", "float32(float32, float32)"]) def bar(x, y): return x + y 2) jit(function, **targetoptions) -> dispatcher Create a dispatcher function object that specializes at call site. Examples: @jit def foo(x, y): return x + y @jit(nopython=True) def bar(x, y): return x + y """ if 'argtypes' in options: raise DeprecationError(_msg_deprecated_signature_arg.format('argtypes')) if 'restype' in options: raise DeprecationError(_msg_deprecated_signature_arg.format('restype')) if options.get('nopython', False) and options.get('forceobj', False): raise ValueError("Only one of 'nopython' or 'forceobj' can be True.") if "_target" in options: # Set the "target_backend" option if "_target" is defined. options['target_backend'] = options['_target'] target = options.pop('_target', 'cpu') options['boundscheck'] = boundscheck # Handle signature if signature_or_function is None: # No signature, no function pyfunc = None sigs = None elif isinstance(signature_or_function, list): # A list of signatures is passed pyfunc = None sigs = signature_or_function elif sigutils.is_signature(signature_or_function): # A single signature is passed pyfunc = None sigs = [signature_or_function] else: # A function is passed pyfunc = signature_or_function sigs = None dispatcher_args = {} if pipeline_class is not None: dispatcher_args['pipeline_class'] = pipeline_class wrapper = _jit(sigs, locals=locals, target=target, cache=cache, targetoptions=options, **dispatcher_args) if pyfunc is not None: return wrapper(pyfunc) else: return wrapper def _jit(sigs, locals, target, cache, targetoptions, **dispatcher_args): from numba.core.target_extension import resolve_dispatcher_from_str dispatcher = resolve_dispatcher_from_str(target) def wrapper(func): if extending.is_jitted(func): raise TypeError( "A jit decorator was called on an already jitted function " f"{func}. If trying to access the original python " f"function, use the {func}.py_func attribute." ) if not inspect.isfunction(func): raise TypeError( "The decorated object is not a function (got type " f"{type(func)})." ) if config.ENABLE_CUDASIM and target == 'cuda': from numba import cuda return cuda.jit(func) if config.DISABLE_JIT and not target == 'npyufunc': return func disp = dispatcher(py_func=func, locals=locals, targetoptions=targetoptions, **dispatcher_args) if cache: disp.enable_caching() if sigs is not None: # Register the Dispatcher to the type inference mechanism, # even though the decorator hasn't returned yet. from numba.core import typeinfer with typeinfer.register_dispatcher(disp): for sig in sigs: disp.compile(sig) disp.disable_compile() return disp return wrapper def generated_jit(function=None, cache=False, pipeline_class=None, **options): """ This decorator allows flexible type-based compilation of a jitted function. It works as `@jit`, except that the decorated function is called at compile-time with the *types* of the arguments and should return an implementation function for those types. """ dispatcher_args = {} if pipeline_class is not None: dispatcher_args['pipeline_class'] = pipeline_class wrapper = _jit(sigs=None, locals={}, target='cpu', cache=cache, targetoptions=options, impl_kind='generated', **dispatcher_args) if function is not None: return wrapper(function) else: return wrapper def njit(*args, **kws): """ Equivalent to jit(nopython=True) See documentation for jit function/decorator for full description. """ if 'nopython' in kws: warnings.warn('nopython is set for njit and is ignored', RuntimeWarning) if 'forceobj' in kws: warnings.warn('forceobj is set for njit and is ignored', RuntimeWarning) del kws['forceobj'] kws.update({'nopython': True}) return jit(*args, **kws) def cfunc(sig, locals={}, cache=False, pipeline_class=None, **options): """ This decorator is used to compile a Python function into a C callback usable with foreign C libraries. Usage:: @cfunc("float64(float64, float64)", nopython=True, cache=True) def add(a, b): return a + b """ sig = sigutils.normalize_signature(sig) def wrapper(func): from numba.core.ccallback import CFunc additional_args = {} if pipeline_class is not None: additional_args['pipeline_class'] = pipeline_class res = CFunc(func, sig, locals=locals, options=options, **additional_args) if cache: res.enable_caching() res.compile() return res return wrapper def jit_module(**kwargs): """ Automatically ``jit``-wraps functions defined in a Python module Note that ``jit_module`` should only be called at the end of the module to be jitted. In addition, only functions which are defined in the module ``jit_module`` is called from are considered for automatic jit-wrapping. See the Numba documentation for more information about what can/cannot be jitted. :param kwargs: Keyword arguments to pass to ``jit`` such as ``nopython`` or ``error_model``. """ # Get the module jit_module is being called from frame = inspect.stack()[1] module = inspect.getmodule(frame[0]) # Replace functions in module with jit-wrapped versions for name, obj in module.__dict__.items(): if inspect.isfunction(obj) and inspect.getmodule(obj) == module: _logger.debug("Auto decorating function {} from module {} with jit " "and options: {}".format(obj, module.__name__, kwargs)) module.__dict__[name] = jit(obj, **kwargs)