It's not as simple as a set of options but you can see how it works. In your python source directory look for this
distutils/ccompiler.py
In that file each compiler has an entry like this
# Map compiler types to (module_name, class_name) pairs -- ie. where to
# find the code that implements an interface to this compiler. (The module
# is assumed to be in the 'distutils' package.)
compiler_class = { 'unix': ('unixccompiler', 'UnixCCompiler',
"standard UNIX-style compiler"),
'msvc': ('msvccompiler', 'MSVCCompiler',
"Microsoft Visual C++"),
'cygwin': ('cygwinccompiler', 'CygwinCCompiler',
"Cygwin port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
'mingw32': ('cygwinccompiler', 'Mingw32CCompiler',
"Mingw32 port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
'bcpp': ('bcppcompiler', 'BCPPCompiler',
"Borland C++ Compiler"),
'emx': ('emxccompiler', 'EMXCCompiler',
"EMX port of GNU C Compiler for OS/2"),
}
You can find the code you're looking for in
distutils/cygwinccompiler.py
If you edit your setup.py script and add this
from distutils.core import setup,Extension
from distutils.cygwinccompiler import Mingw32CCompiler
from pprint import pprint
module1 = Extension('demo', sources = ['demo.c'])
m32 = Mingw32CCompiler()
pprint (vars(m32))
setup (name = 'PackageName',
version = '1.0',
description = 'This is a demo package',
ext_modules = [module1])
You can see quite a few of the options available...
{'archiver': ['ar', '-cr'],
'compiler': ['gcc', '-O', '-Wall'],
'compiler_cxx': ['g++', '-O', '-Wall'],
'compiler_so': ['gcc', '-mdll', '-O', '-Wall'],
'dll_libraries': None,
'dllwrap_version': None,
'dry_run': 0,
'force': 0,
'gcc_version': LooseVersion ('4.2.1'),
'include_dirs': [],
'ld_version': None,
'libraries': [],
'library_dirs': [],
'linker_dll': 'dllwrap',
'linker_exe': ['gcc'],
'linker_so': ['dllwrap', '-mdll', '-static'],
'macros': [],
'objects': [],
'output_dir': None,
'preprocessor': None,
'ranlib': ['ranlib'],
'runtime_library_dirs': [],
'verbose': 0}
To access individual options you can use them as follows...
print m32.compile
['gcc', '-O', '-Wall']
There's no simple set of flags. A lot of the flags are configured at runtime and the code above shows you were to look to see how they're generated etc.