I have some large setup.py file that compiles several CUDA files, something like (VERY INCOMPETE, I can provide more info if its relevant):
gpuUtils_ext = Extension(
"_gpuUtils",
sources=include_headers(
[
"gpuUtils.cu",
"python/utilities/cuda_interface/_gpuUtils.pxd",
"python/utilities/cuda_interface/_gpuUtils.pyx",
],
sdist=sys.argv[1] == "sdist",
),
define_macros=[("MACRO_I_WANT", None)],
library_dirs=[CUDA["lib64"]],
libraries=["cudart"],
language="c++",
runtime_library_dirs=[CUDA["lib64"]] if not IS_WINDOWS else None,
include_dirs=[NUMPY_INCLUDE, CUDA["include"], "./CUDA/"],
)
# etc
setup(
name="-",
version="-",
author="-",
packages=find_packages(),
include_package_data=True,
data_files=[("data", ["../data/somefile.file"])],
ext_modules=[foo1, foo2, gpuUtils_ext, foo3], # I have many
py_modules=["foo.py"],
cmdclass={"build_ext": BuildExtension},
install_requires=["Cython", "matplotlib", "numpy", "scipy", "tqdm"],
license_files=("LICENSE",),
license="BSD 3-Clause",
# since the package has c code, the egg cannot be zipped
zip_safe=False,
)
The file gpuUtils.cu
, that is being compiled in this setup.py
has a macro MACRO_I_WANT
that its defined here and the inside the file there is a #ifdef
to disable a piece of code.
I would like to change setuptools such that the user can provide a flag for this macro, e.g. python setup.py install
would not define the macro, but python setup.py intall -define-macro
would define it.
As far as I can see/test, the general option of distutils: How to pass a user defined parameter to setup.py? does not work, because by the time InstallCommand
is called, my Extensions
have already been defined and passed to setup
.
Is this doable? How can I do it? Is this the right way of approaching it?