jpy is a bi-directional Python-Java bridge which you can use to embed Java code in Python programs or the other way round. It has been designed particularly with regard to maximum data transfer speed between the two languages. It comes with a number of outstanding features:
- Fully translates Java class hierarchies to Python
- Transparently handles Java method overloading
- Support of Java multi-threading
- Fast and memory-efficient support of primitive Java array parameters via Python buffers (e.g. Numpy arrays)
- Support of Java methods that modify primitive Java array parameters (mutable parameters)
- Java arrays translate into Python sequence objects
- Java API for accessing Python objects (
jpy.jar
)
jpy has been tested with Python 3.4–3.8 and OpenJDK 8 on 64-bit Ubuntu Linux, Windows 10, and macOS.
The initial development of jpy was driven by the need to write Python extensions to an established scientific imaging application programmed in Java, namely the SNAP toolbox, the SeNtinel Application Platform project, funded by the European Space Agency (ESA). (jpy is bundled with the SNAP distribution.)
Writing such Python plug-ins for a Java application usually requires a bi-directional communication between Python and Java since the Python extension code must be able to call back into the Java APIs.
For more information please have a look into jpy's
Install a JDK 8, preferably the Oracle distribution. Set JDK_HOME
or
JPY_JDK_HOME
to point to your JDK installation and run the build script:
$ export JDK_HOME=<your-jdk-dir>
$ export JAVA_HOME=$JDK_HOME
$ pip install setuptools wheel
$ python setup.py build maven bdist_wheel
On success, the wheel is found in the dist
directory.
To deploy the jpy.jar
(if you don't know why you need this step, this is not
for you)::
$ mvn clean deploy -DskipTests=true
Set JDK_HOME
or JPY_JDK_HOME
to point to your JDK installation. You'll
need Windows SDK 7.1 or Visual Studio C++ to build the sources. With Windows
SDK 7.1::
> SET VS90COMNTOOLS=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 12.0\Common7\Tools\
> SET DISTUTILS_USE_SDK=1
> C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1\bin\setenv /x64 /release
> SET JDK_HOME=<your-jdk-dir>
> pip install setuptools wheel
> python setup.py build maven bdist_wheel
With Visual Studio 14 and higher it is much easier::
> SET VS100COMNTOOLS=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\Common7\Tools\
> SET JDK_HOME=<your-jdk-dir>
> pip install setuptools wheel
> python setup.py build maven bdist_wheel
On success, the wheel can be found in the dist
directory.
TBD
The target reader of this section is a jpy developer wishing to release a new jpy version. Note: You need to have Sphinx installed to update the documentation.
- Make sure all Java and Python units tests run green
- Remove the
-SNAPSHOT
qualifier from versions names in both the Mavenpom.xml
andsetup.py
files, and update the version numbers and copyright years injpyutil.py
anddoc/conf.py
. - Generate Java API doc by running
mvn javadoc:javadoc
which will update directorydoc/_static
- Update documentation,
cd doc
and runmake html
- http://peterdowns.com/posts/first-time-with-pypi.html
Run: python setup.py build test
As of 2020-08-27, Python wheel packages for jpy are automatically built on AppVeyor, but at present they are uploaded only to a private FTP server and not publicly released. Wheels are built for Python versions 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, and 3.8 on Linux, Windows, and macOS (≥10.9). Only 64-bit wheels are built.
The repository also contains an outdated configuration for automated Travis builds, but this configuration is currently unmaintained and broken.
This project has adopted the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct or contact opencode@deephaven.io with any additional questions or comments.
For instructions on contributing, see CONTRIBUTING.md.
Some of the details on this README are out of date. Efforts to improve them will be made in the future.