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3. Configure Python — Python 3.13.3 documentation

3. Configure Python¶ 3.1. Build Requirements¶

Features and minimum versions required to build CPython:

Changed in version 3.1: Tcl/Tk version 8.3.1 is now required.

Changed in version 3.5: On Windows, Visual Studio 2015 or later is now required. Tcl/Tk version 8.4 is now required.

Changed in version 3.6: Selected C99 features are now required, like <stdint.h> and static inline functions.

Changed in version 3.7: Thread support and OpenSSL 1.0.2 are now required.

Changed in version 3.10: OpenSSL 1.1.1 is now required. Require SQLite 3.7.15.

Changed in version 3.11: C11 compiler, IEEE 754 and NaN support are now required. On Windows, Visual Studio 2017 or later is required. Tcl/Tk version 8.5.12 is now required for the tkinter module.

Changed in version 3.13: Autoconf 2.71, aclocal 1.16.5 and SQLite 3.15.2 are now required.

See also PEP 7 “Style Guide for C Code” and PEP 11 “CPython platform support”.

3.2. Generated files¶

To reduce build dependencies, Python source code contains multiple generated files. Commands to regenerate all generated files:

make regen-all
make regen-stdlib-module-names
make regen-limited-abi
make regen-configure

The Makefile.pre.in file documents generated files, their inputs, and tools used to regenerate them. Search for regen-* make targets.

3.2.1. configure script¶

The make regen-configure command regenerates the aclocal.m4 file and the configure script using the Tools/build/regen-configure.sh shell script which uses an Ubuntu container to get the same tools versions and have a reproducible output.

The container is optional, the following command can be run locally:

The generated files can change depending on the exact autoconf-archive, aclocal and pkg-config versions.

3.3. Configure Options¶

List all configure script options using:

See also the Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt in the Python source distribution.

3.3.1. General Options¶
--enable-loadable-sqlite-extensions¶

Support loadable extensions in the _sqlite extension module (default is no) of the sqlite3 module.

See the sqlite3.Connection.enable_load_extension() method of the sqlite3 module.

Added in version 3.6.

--disable-ipv6¶

Disable IPv6 support (enabled by default if supported), see the socket module.

--enable-big-digits=[15|30]¶

Define the size in bits of Python int digits: 15 or 30 bits.

By default, the digit size is 30.

Define the PYLONG_BITS_IN_DIGIT to 15 or 30.

See sys.int_info.bits_per_digit.

--with-suffix=SUFFIX¶

Set the Python executable suffix to SUFFIX.

The default suffix is .exe on Windows and macOS (python.exe executable), .js on Emscripten node, .html on Emscripten browser, .wasm on WASI, and an empty string on other platforms (python executable).

Changed in version 3.11: The default suffix on WASM platform is one of .js, .html or .wasm.

--with-tzpath=<list of absolute paths separated by pathsep>¶

Select the default time zone search path for zoneinfo.TZPATH. See the Compile-time configuration of the zoneinfo module.

Default: /usr/share/zoneinfo:/usr/lib/zoneinfo:/usr/share/lib/zoneinfo:/etc/zoneinfo.

See os.pathsep path separator.

Added in version 3.9.

--without-decimal-contextvar¶

Build the _decimal extension module using a thread-local context rather than a coroutine-local context (default), see the decimal module.

See decimal.HAVE_CONTEXTVAR and the contextvars module.

Added in version 3.9.

--with-dbmliborder=<list of backend names>¶

Override order to check db backends for the dbm module

A valid value is a colon (:) separated string with the backend names:

--without-c-locale-coercion¶

Disable C locale coercion to a UTF-8 based locale (enabled by default).

Don’t define the PY_COERCE_C_LOCALE macro.

See PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE and the PEP 538.

--without-freelists¶

Disable all freelists except the empty tuple singleton.

Added in version 3.11.

--with-platlibdir=DIRNAME¶

Python library directory name (default is lib).

Fedora and SuSE use lib64 on 64-bit platforms.

See sys.platlibdir.

Added in version 3.9.

--with-wheel-pkg-dir=PATH¶

Directory of wheel packages used by the ensurepip module (none by default).

Some Linux distribution packaging policies recommend against bundling dependencies. For example, Fedora installs wheel packages in the /usr/share/python-wheels/ directory and don’t install the ensurepip._bundled package.

Added in version 3.10.

--with-pkg-config=[check|yes|no]¶

Whether configure should use pkg-config to detect build dependencies.

Added in version 3.11.

--enable-pystats¶

Turn on internal Python performance statistics gathering.

By default, statistics gathering is off. Use python3 -X pystats command or set PYTHONSTATS=1 environment variable to turn on statistics gathering at Python startup.

At Python exit, dump statistics if statistics gathering was on and not cleared.

Effects:

The statistics will be dumped to a arbitrary (probably unique) file in /tmp/py_stats/ (Unix) or C:\temp\py_stats\ (Windows). If that directory does not exist, results will be printed on stderr.

Use Tools/scripts/summarize_stats.py to read the stats.

Statistics:

Added in version 3.11.

--disable-gil¶

Enables experimental support for running Python without the global interpreter lock (GIL): free threading build.

Defines the Py_GIL_DISABLED macro and adds "t" to sys.abiflags.

See Free-threaded CPython for more detail.

Added in version 3.13.

--enable-experimental-jit=[no|yes|yes-off|interpreter]¶

Indicate how to integrate the JIT compiler.

By convention, --enable-experimental-jit is a shorthand for --enable-experimental-jit=yes.

Note

When building CPython with JIT enabled, ensure that your system has Python 3.11 or later installed.

Added in version 3.13.

PKG_CONFIG¶

Path to pkg-config utility.

PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR¶
PKG_CONFIG_PATH¶

pkg-config options.

3.3.2. C compiler options¶
CC¶

C compiler command.

CFLAGS¶

C compiler flags.

CPP¶

C preprocessor command.

CPPFLAGS¶

C preprocessor flags, e.g. -Iinclude_dir.

3.3.3. Linker options¶
LDFLAGS¶

Linker flags, e.g. -Llibrary_directory.

LIBS¶

Libraries to pass to the linker, e.g. -llibrary.

MACHDEP¶

Name for machine-dependent library files.

3.3.4. Options for third-party dependencies¶

Added in version 3.11.

BZIP2_CFLAGS¶
BZIP2_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags to link Python to libbz2, used by bz2 module, overriding pkg-config.

CURSES_CFLAGS¶
CURSES_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libncurses or libncursesw, used by curses module, overriding pkg-config.

GDBM_CFLAGS¶
GDBM_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for gdbm.

LIBB2_CFLAGS¶
LIBB2_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libb2 (BLAKE2), used by hashlib module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBEDIT_CFLAGS¶
LIBEDIT_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libedit, used by readline module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBFFI_CFLAGS¶
LIBFFI_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libffi, used by ctypes module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBMPDEC_CFLAGS¶
LIBMPDEC_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libmpdec, used by decimal module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBLZMA_CFLAGS¶
LIBLZMA_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for liblzma, used by lzma module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBREADLINE_CFLAGS¶
LIBREADLINE_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libreadline, used by readline module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBSQLITE3_CFLAGS¶
LIBSQLITE3_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libsqlite3, used by sqlite3 module, overriding pkg-config.

LIBUUID_CFLAGS¶
LIBUUID_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libuuid, used by uuid module, overriding pkg-config.

PANEL_CFLAGS¶
PANEL_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for PANEL, overriding pkg-config.

C compiler and linker flags for libpanel or libpanelw, used by curses.panel module, overriding pkg-config.

TCLTK_CFLAGS¶
TCLTK_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for TCLTK, overriding pkg-config.

ZLIB_CFLAGS¶
ZLIB_LIBS¶

C compiler and linker flags for libzlib, used by gzip module, overriding pkg-config.

3.3.5. WebAssembly Options¶
--with-emscripten-target=[browser|node]¶

Set build flavor for wasm32-emscripten.

Added in version 3.11.

--enable-wasm-dynamic-linking¶

Turn on dynamic linking support for WASM.

Dynamic linking enables dlopen. File size of the executable increases due to limited dead code elimination and additional features.

Added in version 3.11.

--enable-wasm-pthreads¶

Turn on pthreads support for WASM.

Added in version 3.11.

3.3.6. Install Options¶
--prefix=PREFIX¶

Install architecture-independent files in PREFIX. On Unix, it defaults to /usr/local.

This value can be retrieved at runtime using sys.prefix.

As an example, one can use --prefix="$HOME/.local/" to install a Python in its home directory.

--exec-prefix=EPREFIX¶

Install architecture-dependent files in EPREFIX, defaults to --prefix.

This value can be retrieved at runtime using sys.exec_prefix.

--disable-test-modules¶

Don’t build nor install test modules, like the test package or the _testcapi extension module (built and installed by default).

Added in version 3.10.

--with-ensurepip=[upgrade|install|no]¶

Select the ensurepip command run on Python installation:

Added in version 3.6.

3.3.7. Performance options¶

Configuring Python using --enable-optimizations --with-lto (PGO + LTO) is recommended for best performance. The experimental --enable-bolt flag can also be used to improve performance.

--enable-optimizations¶

Enable Profile Guided Optimization (PGO) using PROFILE_TASK (disabled by default).

The C compiler Clang requires llvm-profdata program for PGO. On macOS, GCC also requires it: GCC is just an alias to Clang on macOS.

Disable also semantic interposition in libpython if --enable-shared and GCC is used: add -fno-semantic-interposition to the compiler and linker flags.

Note

During the build, you may encounter compiler warnings about profile data not being available for some source files. These warnings are harmless, as only a subset of the code is exercised during profile data acquisition. To disable these warnings on Clang, manually suppress them by adding -Wno-profile-instr-unprofiled to CFLAGS.

Added in version 3.6.

Changed in version 3.10: Use -fno-semantic-interposition on GCC.

PROFILE_TASK¶

Environment variable used in the Makefile: Python command line arguments for the PGO generation task.

Default: -m test --pgo --timeout=$(TESTTIMEOUT).

Added in version 3.8.

Changed in version 3.13: Task failure is no longer ignored silently.

--with-lto=[full|thin|no|yes]¶

Enable Link Time Optimization (LTO) in any build (disabled by default).

The C compiler Clang requires llvm-ar for LTO (ar on macOS), as well as an LTO-aware linker (ld.gold or lld).

Added in version 3.6.

Added in version 3.11: To use ThinLTO feature, use --with-lto=thin on Clang.

Changed in version 3.12: Use ThinLTO as the default optimization policy on Clang if the compiler accepts the flag.

--enable-bolt¶

Enable usage of the BOLT post-link binary optimizer (disabled by default).

BOLT is part of the LLVM project but is not always included in their binary distributions. This flag requires that llvm-bolt and merge-fdata are available.

BOLT is still a fairly new project so this flag should be considered experimental for now. Because this tool operates on machine code its success is dependent on a combination of the build environment + the other optimization configure args + the CPU architecture, and not all combinations are supported. BOLT versions before LLVM 16 are known to crash BOLT under some scenarios. Use of LLVM 16 or newer for BOLT optimization is strongly encouraged.

The BOLT_INSTRUMENT_FLAGS and BOLT_APPLY_FLAGS configure variables can be defined to override the default set of arguments for llvm-bolt to instrument and apply BOLT data to binaries, respectively.

Added in version 3.12.

BOLT_APPLY_FLAGS¶

Arguments to llvm-bolt when creating a BOLT optimized binary.

Added in version 3.12.

BOLT_INSTRUMENT_FLAGS¶

Arguments to llvm-bolt when instrumenting binaries.

Added in version 3.12.

--with-computed-gotos¶

Enable computed gotos in evaluation loop (enabled by default on supported compilers).

--without-mimalloc¶

Disable the fast mimalloc allocator (enabled by default).

See also PYTHONMALLOC environment variable.

--without-pymalloc¶

Disable the specialized Python memory allocator pymalloc (enabled by default).

See also PYTHONMALLOC environment variable.

--without-doc-strings¶

Disable static documentation strings to reduce the memory footprint (enabled by default). Documentation strings defined in Python are not affected.

Don’t define the WITH_DOC_STRINGS macro.

See the PyDoc_STRVAR() macro.

--enable-profiling¶

Enable C-level code profiling with gprof (disabled by default).

--with-strict-overflow¶

Add -fstrict-overflow to the C compiler flags (by default we add -fno-strict-overflow instead).

3.3.8. Python Debug Build¶

A debug build is Python built with the --with-pydebug configure option.

Effects of a debug build:

See also the Python Development Mode and the --with-trace-refs configure option.

Changed in version 3.8: Release builds and debug builds are now ABI compatible: defining the Py_DEBUG macro no longer implies the Py_TRACE_REFS macro (see the --with-trace-refs option).

3.3.9. Debug options¶
--with-pydebug¶

Build Python in debug mode: define the Py_DEBUG macro (disabled by default).

--with-trace-refs¶

Enable tracing references for debugging purpose (disabled by default).

Effects:

The PYTHONDUMPREFS environment variable can be used to dump objects and reference counts still alive at Python exit.

Statically allocated objects are not traced.

Added in version 3.8.

Changed in version 3.13: This build is now ABI compatible with release build and debug build.

--with-assertions¶

Build with C assertions enabled (default is no): assert(...); and _PyObject_ASSERT(...);.

If set, the NDEBUG macro is not defined in the OPT compiler variable.

See also the --with-pydebug option (debug build) which also enables assertions.

Added in version 3.6.

--with-valgrind¶

Enable Valgrind support (default is no).

--with-dtrace¶

Enable DTrace support (default is no).

See Instrumenting CPython with DTrace and SystemTap.

Added in version 3.6.

--with-address-sanitizer¶

Enable AddressSanitizer memory error detector, asan (default is no).

Added in version 3.6.

--with-memory-sanitizer¶

Enable MemorySanitizer allocation error detector, msan (default is no).

Added in version 3.6.

--with-undefined-behavior-sanitizer¶

Enable UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer undefined behaviour detector, ubsan (default is no).

Added in version 3.6.

--with-thread-sanitizer¶

Enable ThreadSanitizer data race detector, tsan (default is no).

Added in version 3.13.

3.3.10. Linker options¶

Enable building a shared Python library: libpython (default is no).

--without-static-libpython¶

Do not build libpythonMAJOR.MINOR.a and do not install python.o (built and enabled by default).

Added in version 3.10.

3.3.11. Libraries options¶
--with-libs='lib1 ...'¶

Link against additional libraries (default is no).

--with-system-expat¶

Build the pyexpat module using an installed expat library (default is no).

--with-system-libmpdec¶

Build the _decimal extension module using an installed mpdecimal library, see the decimal module (default is yes).

Added in version 3.3.

Changed in version 3.13: Default to using the installed mpdecimal library.

Deprecated since version 3.13, will be removed in version 3.15: A copy of the mpdecimal library sources will no longer be distributed with Python 3.15.

--with-readline=readline|editline¶

Designate a backend library for the readline module.

Added in version 3.10.

--without-readline¶

Don’t build the readline module (built by default).

Don’t define the HAVE_LIBREADLINE macro.

Added in version 3.10.

--with-libm=STRING¶

Override libm math library to STRING (default is system-dependent).

--with-libc=STRING¶

Override libc C library to STRING (default is system-dependent).

--with-openssl=DIR¶

Root of the OpenSSL directory.

Added in version 3.7.

--with-openssl-rpath=[no|auto|DIR]¶

Set runtime library directory (rpath) for OpenSSL libraries:

Added in version 3.10.

3.3.12. Security Options¶
--with-hash-algorithm=[fnv|siphash13|siphash24]¶

Select hash algorithm for use in Python/pyhash.c:

Added in version 3.4.

Added in version 3.11: siphash13 is added and it is the new default.

--with-builtin-hashlib-hashes=md5,sha1,sha256,sha512,sha3,blake2¶

Built-in hash modules:

Added in version 3.9.

--with-ssl-default-suites=[python|openssl|STRING]¶

Override the OpenSSL default cipher suites string:

See the ssl module.

Added in version 3.7.

Changed in version 3.10: The settings python and STRING also set TLS 1.2 as minimum protocol version.

3.3.13. macOS Options¶

See Mac/README.rst.

--enable-universalsdk¶
--enable-universalsdk=SDKDIR¶

Create a universal binary build. SDKDIR specifies which macOS SDK should be used to perform the build (default is no).

--enable-framework¶
--enable-framework=INSTALLDIR¶

Create a Python.framework rather than a traditional Unix install. Optional INSTALLDIR specifies the installation path (default is no).

--with-universal-archs=ARCH¶

Specify the kind of universal binary that should be created. This option is only valid when --enable-universalsdk is set.

Options:

Note that values for this configuration item are not the same as the identifiers used for universal binary wheels on macOS. See the Python Packaging User Guide for details on the packaging platform compatibility tags used on macOS

--with-framework-name=FRAMEWORK¶

Specify the name for the python framework on macOS only valid when --enable-framework is set (default: Python).

--with-app-store-compliance¶
--with-app-store-compliance=PATCH-FILE¶

The Python standard library contains strings that are known to trigger automated inspection tool errors when submitted for distribution by the macOS and iOS App Stores. If enabled, this option will apply the list of patches that are known to correct app store compliance. A custom patch file can also be specified. This option is disabled by default.

Added in version 3.13.

3.3.14. iOS Options¶

See iOS/README.rst.

--enable-framework=INSTALLDIR¶

Create a Python.framework. Unlike macOS, the INSTALLDIR argument specifying the installation path is mandatory.

--with-framework-name=FRAMEWORK¶

Specify the name for the framework (default: Python).

3.3.15. Cross Compiling Options¶

Cross compiling, also known as cross building, can be used to build Python for another CPU architecture or platform. Cross compiling requires a Python interpreter for the build platform. The version of the build Python must match the version of the cross compiled host Python.

--build=BUILD¶

configure for building on BUILD, usually guessed by config.guess.

--host=HOST¶

cross-compile to build programs to run on HOST (target platform)

--with-build-python=path/to/python¶

path to build python binary for cross compiling

Added in version 3.11.

CONFIG_SITE=file¶

An environment variable that points to a file with configure overrides.

Example config.site file:

# config.site-aarch64
ac_cv_buggy_getaddrinfo=no
ac_cv_file__dev_ptmx=yes
ac_cv_file__dev_ptc=no
HOSTRUNNER¶

Program to run CPython for the host platform for cross-compilation.

Added in version 3.11.

Cross compiling example:

CONFIG_SITE=config.site-aarch64 ../configure \
    --build=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu \
    --host=aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu \
    --with-build-python=../x86_64/python
3.4. Python Build System¶ 3.4.1. Main files of the build system¶ 3.4.2. Main build steps¶ 3.4.3. Main Makefile targets¶ 3.4.3.1. make¶

For the most part, when rebuilding after editing some code or refreshing your checkout from upstream, all you need to do is execute make, which (per Make’s semantics) builds the default target, the first one defined in the Makefile. By tradition (including in the CPython project) this is usually the all target. The configure script expands an autoconf variable, @DEF_MAKE_ALL_RULE@ to describe precisely which targets make all will build. The three choices are:

Depending on the most recent source file changes, Make will rebuild any targets (object files and executables) deemed out-of-date, including running configure again if necessary. Source/target dependencies are many and maintained manually however, so Make sometimes doesn’t have all the information necessary to correctly detect all targets which need to be rebuilt. Depending on which targets aren’t rebuilt, you might experience a number of problems. If you have build or test problems which you can’t otherwise explain, make clean && make should work around most dependency problems, at the expense of longer build times.

3.4.3.2. make platform¶

Build the python program, but don’t build the standard library extension modules. This generates a file named platform which contains a single line describing the details of the build platform, e.g., macosx-14.3-arm64-3.12 or linux-x86_64-3.13.

3.4.3.3. make profile-opt¶

Build Python using profile-guided optimization (PGO). You can use the configure --enable-optimizations option to make this the default target of the make command (make all or just make).

3.4.3.4. make clean¶

Remove built files.

3.4.3.5. make distclean¶

In addition to the work done by make clean, remove files created by the configure script. configure will have to be run before building again. [1]

3.4.3.6. make install¶

Build the all target and install Python.

3.4.3.7. make test¶

Build the all target and run the Python test suite with the --fast-ci option. Variables:

3.4.3.8. make buildbottest¶

This is similar to make test, but uses the --slow-ci option and default timeout of 20 minutes, instead of --fast-ci option.

3.4.3.9. make regen-all¶

Regenerate (almost) all generated files. These include (but are not limited to) bytecode cases, and parser generator file. make regen-stdlib-module-names and autoconf must be run separately for the remaining generated files.

3.4.4. C extensions¶

Some C extensions are built as built-in modules, like the sys module. They are built with the Py_BUILD_CORE_BUILTIN macro defined. Built-in modules have no __file__ attribute:

>>> import sys
>>> sys
<module 'sys' (built-in)>
>>> sys.__file__
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: module 'sys' has no attribute '__file__'

Other C extensions are built as dynamic libraries, like the _asyncio module. They are built with the Py_BUILD_CORE_MODULE macro defined. Example on Linux x86-64:

>>> import _asyncio
>>> _asyncio
<module '_asyncio' from '/usr/lib64/python3.9/lib-dynload/_asyncio.cpython-39-x86_64-linux-gnu.so'>
>>> _asyncio.__file__
'/usr/lib64/python3.9/lib-dynload/_asyncio.cpython-39-x86_64-linux-gnu.so'

Modules/Setup is used to generate Makefile targets to build C extensions. At the beginning of the files, C extensions are built as built-in modules. Extensions defined after the *shared* marker are built as dynamic libraries.

The PyAPI_FUNC(), PyAPI_DATA() and PyMODINIT_FUNC macros of Include/exports.h are defined differently depending if the Py_BUILD_CORE_MODULE macro is defined:

If the Py_BUILD_CORE_BUILTIN macro is used by mistake on a C extension built as a shared library, its PyInit_xxx() function is not exported, causing an ImportError on import.

3.5. Compiler and linker flags¶

Options set by the ./configure script and environment variables and used by Makefile.

3.5.1. Preprocessor flags¶
CONFIGURE_CPPFLAGS¶

Value of CPPFLAGS variable passed to the ./configure script.

Added in version 3.6.

CPPFLAGS¶

(Objective) C/C++ preprocessor flags, e.g. -Iinclude_dir if you have headers in a nonstandard directory include_dir.

Both CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS need to contain the shell’s value to be able to build extension modules using the directories specified in the environment variables.

BASECPPFLAGS¶

Added in version 3.4.

PY_CPPFLAGS¶

Extra preprocessor flags added for building the interpreter object files.

Default: $(BASECPPFLAGS) -I. -I$(srcdir)/Include $(CONFIGURE_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS).

Added in version 3.2.

3.5.2. Compiler flags¶
CC¶

C compiler command.

Example: gcc -pthread.

CXX¶

C++ compiler command.

Example: g++ -pthread.

CFLAGS¶

C compiler flags.

CFLAGS_NODIST¶

CFLAGS_NODIST is used for building the interpreter and stdlib C extensions. Use it when a compiler flag should not be part of CFLAGS once Python is installed (gh-65320).

In particular, CFLAGS should not contain:

Added in version 3.5.

COMPILEALL_OPTS¶

Options passed to the compileall command line when building PYC files in make install. Default: -j0.

Added in version 3.12.

Extra C compiler flags.

CONFIGURE_CFLAGS¶

Value of CFLAGS variable passed to the ./configure script.

Added in version 3.2.

CONFIGURE_CFLAGS_NODIST¶

Value of CFLAGS_NODIST variable passed to the ./configure script.

Added in version 3.5.

BASECFLAGS¶

Base compiler flags.

OPT¶

Optimization flags.

CFLAGS_ALIASING¶

Strict or non-strict aliasing flags used to compile Python/dtoa.c.

Added in version 3.7.

CCSHARED¶

Compiler flags used to build a shared library.

For example, -fPIC is used on Linux and on BSD.

CFLAGSFORSHARED¶

Extra C flags added for building the interpreter object files.

Default: $(CCSHARED) when --enable-shared is used, or an empty string otherwise.

PY_CFLAGS¶

Default: $(BASECFLAGS) $(OPT) $(CONFIGURE_CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) $(EXTRA_CFLAGS).

PY_CFLAGS_NODIST¶

Default: $(CONFIGURE_CFLAGS_NODIST) $(CFLAGS_NODIST) -I$(srcdir)/Include/internal.

Added in version 3.5.

PY_STDMODULE_CFLAGS¶

C flags used for building the interpreter object files.

Default: $(PY_CFLAGS) $(PY_CFLAGS_NODIST) $(PY_CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGSFORSHARED).

Added in version 3.7.

PY_CORE_CFLAGS¶

Default: $(PY_STDMODULE_CFLAGS) -DPy_BUILD_CORE.

Added in version 3.2.

PY_BUILTIN_MODULE_CFLAGS¶

Compiler flags to build a standard library extension module as a built-in module, like the posix module.

Default: $(PY_STDMODULE_CFLAGS) -DPy_BUILD_CORE_BUILTIN.

Added in version 3.8.

PURIFY¶

Purify command. Purify is a memory debugger program.

Default: empty string (not used).

3.5.3. Linker flags¶
LINKCC¶

Linker command used to build programs like python and _testembed.

Default: $(PURIFY) $(CC).

CONFIGURE_LDFLAGS¶

Value of LDFLAGS variable passed to the ./configure script.

Avoid assigning CFLAGS, LDFLAGS, etc. so users can use them on the command line to append to these values without stomping the pre-set values.

Added in version 3.2.

LDFLAGS_NODIST¶

LDFLAGS_NODIST is used in the same manner as CFLAGS_NODIST. Use it when a linker flag should not be part of LDFLAGS once Python is installed (gh-65320).

In particular, LDFLAGS should not contain:

CONFIGURE_LDFLAGS_NODIST¶

Value of LDFLAGS_NODIST variable passed to the ./configure script.

Added in version 3.8.

LDFLAGS¶

Linker flags, e.g. -Llib_dir if you have libraries in a nonstandard directory lib_dir.

Both CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS need to contain the shell’s value to be able to build extension modules using the directories specified in the environment variables.

LIBS¶

Linker flags to pass libraries to the linker when linking the Python executable.

Example: -lrt.

LDSHARED¶

Command to build a shared library.

Default: @LDSHARED@ $(PY_LDFLAGS).

BLDSHARED¶

Command to build libpython shared library.

Default: @BLDSHARED@ $(PY_CORE_LDFLAGS).

PY_LDFLAGS¶

Default: $(CONFIGURE_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS).

PY_LDFLAGS_NODIST¶

Default: $(CONFIGURE_LDFLAGS_NODIST) $(LDFLAGS_NODIST).

Added in version 3.8.

PY_CORE_LDFLAGS¶

Linker flags used for building the interpreter object files.

Added in version 3.8.

Footnotes


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