OpenCV  4.6.0
Open Source Computer Vision
How OpenCV-Python Bindings Works?

Goal

Learn:

How OpenCV-Python bindings are generated?

In OpenCV, all algorithms are implemented in C++. But these algorithms can be used from different languages like Python, Java etc. This is made possible by the bindings generators. These generators create a bridge between C++ and Python which enables users to call C++ functions from Python. To get a complete picture of what is happening in background, a good knowledge of Python/C API is required. A simple example on extending C++ functions to Python can be found in official Python documentation[1]. So extending all functions in OpenCV to Python by writing their wrapper functions manually is a time-consuming task. So OpenCV does it in a more intelligent way. OpenCV generates these wrapper functions automatically from the C++ headers using some Python scripts which are located in modules/python/src2. We will look into what they do.

First, modules/python/CMakeFiles.txt is a CMake script which checks the modules to be extended to Python. It will automatically check all the modules to be extended and grab their header files. These header files contain list of all classes, functions, constants etc. for that particular modules.

Second, these header files are passed to a Python script, modules/python/src2/gen2.py. This is the Python bindings generator script. It calls another Python script modules/python/src2/hdr_parser.py. This is the header parser script. This header parser splits the complete header file into small Python lists. So these lists contain all details about a particular function, class etc. For example, a function will be parsed to get a list containing function name, return type, input arguments, argument types etc. Final list contains details of all the functions, enums, structs, classes etc. in that header file.

But header parser doesn't parse all the functions/classes in the header file. The developer has to specify which functions should be exported to Python. For that, there are certain macros added to the beginning of these declarations which enables the header parser to identify functions to be parsed. These macros are added by the developer who programs the particular function. In short, the developer decides which functions should be extended to Python and which are not. Details of those macros will be given in next session.

So header parser returns a final big list of parsed functions. Our generator script (gen2.py) will create wrapper functions for all the functions/classes/enums/structs parsed by header parser (You can find these header files during compilation in the build/modules/python/ folder as pyopencv_generated_*.h files). But there may be some basic OpenCV datatypes like Mat, Vec4i, Size. They need to be extended manually. For example, a Mat type should be extended to Numpy array, Size should be extended to a tuple of two integers etc. Similarly, there may be some complex structs/classes/functions etc. which need to be extended manually. All such manual wrapper functions are placed in modules/python/src2/cv2.cpp.

So now only thing left is the compilation of these wrapper files which gives us cv2 module. So when you call a function, say res = equalizeHist(img1,img2) in Python, you pass two numpy arrays and you expect another numpy array as the output. So these numpy arrays are converted to cv::Mat and then calls the equalizeHist() function in C++. Final result, res will be converted back into a Numpy array. So in short, almost all operations are done in C++ which gives us almost same speed as that of C++.

So this is the basic version of how OpenCV-Python bindings are generated.

Note
There is no 1:1 mapping of numpy.ndarray on cv::Mat. For example, cv::Mat has channels field, which is emulated as last dimension of numpy.ndarray and implicitly converted. However, such implicit conversion has problem with passing of 3D numpy arrays into C++ code (the last dimension is implicitly reinterpreted as number of channels). Refer to the issue for workarounds if you need to process 3D arrays or ND-arrays with channels. OpenCV 4.5.4+ has cv.Mat wrapper derived from numpy.ndarray to explicitly handle the channels behavior.

How to extend new modules to Python?

Header parser parse the header files based on some wrapper macros added to function declaration. Enumeration constants don't need any wrapper macros. They are automatically wrapped. But remaining functions, classes etc. need wrapper macros.

Functions are extended using CV_EXPORTS_W macro. An example is shown below.

Header parser can understand the input and output arguments from keywords like InputArray, OutputArray etc. But sometimes, we may need to hardcode inputs and outputs. For that, macros like CV_OUT, CV_IN_OUT etc. are used.

CV_OUT Point2f& center, CV_OUT float& radius );

For large classes also, CV_EXPORTS_W is used. To extend class methods, CV_WRAP is used. Similarly, CV_PROP is used for class fields.

class CV_EXPORTS_W CLAHE : public Algorithm
{
public:
CV_WRAP virtual void apply(InputArray src, OutputArray dst) = 0;
CV_WRAP virtual void setClipLimit(double clipLimit) = 0;
CV_WRAP virtual double getClipLimit() const = 0;
}

Overloaded functions can be extended using CV_EXPORTS_AS. But we need to pass a new name so that each function will be called by that name in Python. Take the case of integral function below. Three functions are available, so each one is named with a suffix in Python. Similarly CV_WRAP_AS can be used to wrap overloaded methods.

CV_EXPORTS_W void integral( InputArray src, OutputArray sum, int sdepth = -1 );
CV_EXPORTS_AS(integral2) void integral( InputArray src, OutputArray sum,
OutputArray sqsum, int sdepth = -1, int sqdepth = -1 );
CV_EXPORTS_AS(integral3) void integral( InputArray src, OutputArray sum,
OutputArray sqsum, OutputArray tilted,
int sdepth = -1, int sqdepth = -1 );

Small classes/structs are extended using CV_EXPORTS_W_SIMPLE. These structs are passed by value to C++ functions. Examples are KeyPoint, Match etc. Their methods are extended by CV_WRAP and fields are extended by CV_PROP_RW.

class CV_EXPORTS_W_SIMPLE DMatch
{
public:
CV_WRAP DMatch();
CV_WRAP DMatch(int _queryIdx, int _trainIdx, float _distance);
CV_WRAP DMatch(int _queryIdx, int _trainIdx, int _imgIdx, float _distance);
CV_PROP_RW int queryIdx; // query descriptor index
CV_PROP_RW int trainIdx; // train descriptor index
CV_PROP_RW int imgIdx; // train image index
CV_PROP_RW float distance;
};

Some other small classes/structs can be exported using CV_EXPORTS_W_MAP where it is exported to a Python native dictionary. Moments() is an example of it.

class CV_EXPORTS_W_MAP Moments
{
public:
CV_PROP_RW double m00, m10, m01, m20, m11, m02, m30, m21, m12, m03;
CV_PROP_RW double mu20, mu11, mu02, mu30, mu21, mu12, mu03;
CV_PROP_RW double nu20, nu11, nu02, nu30, nu21, nu12, nu03;
};

So these are the major extension macros available in OpenCV. Typically, a developer has to put proper macros in their appropriate positions. Rest is done by generator scripts. Sometimes, there may be an exceptional cases where generator scripts cannot create the wrappers. Such functions need to be handled manually, to do this write your own pyopencv_*.hpp extending headers and put them into misc/python subdirectory of your module. But most of the time, a code written according to OpenCV coding guidelines will be automatically wrapped by generator scripts.

More advanced cases involves providing Python with additional features that does not exist in the C++ interface such as extra methods, type mappings, or to provide default arguments. We will take UMat datatype as an example of such cases later on. First, to provide Python-specific methods, CV_WRAP_PHANTOM is utilized in a similar manner to CV_WRAP, except that it takes the method header as its argument, and you would need to provide the method body in your own pyopencv_*.hpp extension. UMat::queue() and UMat::context() are an example of such phantom methods that does not exist in C++ interface, but are needed to handle OpenCL functionalities at the Python side. Second, if an already-existing datatype(s) is mappable to your class, it is highly preferable to indicate such capacity using CV_WRAP_MAPPABLE with the source type as its argument, rather than crafting your own binding function(s). This is the case of UMat which maps from Mat. Finally, if a default argument is needed, but it is not provided in the native C++ interface, you can provide it for Python side as the argument of CV_WRAP_DEFAULT. As per the UMat::getMat example below:

class CV_EXPORTS_W UMat
{
public:
// You would need to provide `static bool cv_mappable_to(const Ptr<Mat>& src, Ptr<UMat>& dst)`
CV_WRAP_MAPPABLE(Ptr<Mat>);
/! returns the OpenCL queue used by OpenCV UMat.
// You would need to provide the method body in the binder code
CV_WRAP_PHANTOM(static void* queue());
// You would need to provide the method body in the binder code
CV_WRAP_PHANTOM(static void* context());
CV_WRAP_AS(get) Mat getMat(int flags CV_WRAP_DEFAULT(ACCESS_RW)) const;
};