A Python-3 (CPython >= 3.5.0) Interpreter written in Rust 🐍 😱 🤘.
Check out our online demo running on WebAssembly.
To test RustPython, do the following:
$ git clone https://github.com/RustPython/RustPython
$ cd RustPython
$ cargo run demo.py
Hello, RustPython!
Or use the interactive shell:
$ cargo run
Welcome to rustpython
>>>>> 2+2
4
- Full Python-3 environment entirely in Rust (not CPython bindings)
- A clean implementation without compatibility hacks
Currently the project is in an early phase, and so is the documentation.
You can read the online documentation for the latest code on master.
You can also generate documentation locally by running:
$ cargo doc # Including documentation for all dependencies
$ cargo doc --no-deps --all # Excluding all dependencies
Documentation HTML files can then be found in the target/doc
directory.
If you wish to update the online documentation. Push directly to the release
branch (or ask a maintainer to do so), this will trigger a Travis build that updates the documentation and WebAssembly demo page.
parser/src
: python lexing, parsing and astvm/src
: python virtual machinebuiltins.rs
: Builtin functionscompile.rs
: the python compiler from ast to bytecodeobj
: python builtin types
src
: using the other subcrates to bring rustpython to life.docs
: documentation (work in progress)py_code_object
: CPython bytecode to rustpython bytecode convertor (work in progress)wasm
: Binary crate and resources for WebAssembly buildtests
: integration test snippets
To start contributing, there are a lot of things that need to be done.
Most tasks are listed in the issue tracker.
Check issues labeled with good first issue
if you wish to start coding.
Another approach is to checkout the sourcecode: builtin functions and object methods are often the simplest and easiest way to contribute.
You can also simply run
cargo run tests/snippets/whats_left_to_implement.py
to assist in finding any
unimplemented method.
To test rustpython, there is a collection of python snippets located in the
tests/snippets
directory. To run those tests do the following:
$ cd tests
$ pipenv shell
$ pytest -v
There also are some unittests, you can run those will cargo:
$ cargo test --all
As of now the standard library is under construction.
You can play around with other standard libraries for python. For example, the ouroboros library.
To do this, follow this method:
$ cd ~/GIT
$ git clone [email protected]:pybee/ouroboros.git
$ export PYTHONPATH=~/GIT/ouroboros/ouroboros
$ cd RustPython
$ cargo run -- -c 'import statistics'
At this stage RustPython only has preliminary support for web assembly. The instructions here are intended for developers or those wishing to run a toy example.
To get started, install wasm-pack and npm
. (wasm-bindgen should be installed by wasm-pack
. if not, install it yourself)
Move into the wasm
directory. This contains a custom library crate optimized for wasm build of RustPython.
cd wasm
For testing on a development server, you can run the build.sh
script. For release build which generates files for deploying to a HTTP server, run release.sh
.
If you don't want to use the above scripts, you can do it manually as follows:
Run the build. This can take several minutes depending on the machine.
wasm-pack build
Upon successful build, cd in the the /pkg
directory and run:
npm link
Now move back out into the /app
directory. The files here have been adapted from wasm-pack-template.
Finally, run:
npm install
npm link rustpython_wasm
and you will be able to run the files with:
node_modules/.bin/webpack-dev-server
Now open the webpage on https://localhost:8080, you'll be able to run Python code in the text box.
The code style used is the default rustfmt codestyle. Please format your code accordingly.
Chat with us on gitter.
The initial work was based on windelbouwman/rspython and shinglyu/RustPython
These are some useful links to related projects: