Expand comment explaining update_one_slot (GH-14810)

This commit is contained in:
Jeroen Demeyer 2019-09-10 11:22:05 +02:00 committed by T. Wouters
parent 80428ed4e1
commit 5b00dd8fa8
1 changed files with 59 additions and 9 deletions

View File

@ -7197,8 +7197,9 @@ resolve_slotdups(PyTypeObject *type, PyObject *name)
*pp = NULL;
}
/* Look in all matching slots of the type; if exactly one of these has
a filled-in slot, return its value. Otherwise return NULL. */
/* Look in all slots of the type matching the name. If exactly one of these
has a filled-in slot, return a pointer to that slot.
Otherwise, return NULL. */
res = NULL;
for (pp = ptrs; *pp; pp++) {
ptr = slotptr(type, (*pp)->offset);
@ -7211,12 +7212,61 @@ resolve_slotdups(PyTypeObject *type, PyObject *name)
return res;
}
/* Common code for update_slots_callback() and fixup_slot_dispatchers(). This
does some incredibly complex thinking and then sticks something into the
slot. (It sees if the adjacent slotdefs for the same slot have conflicting
interests, and then stores a generic wrapper or a specific function into
the slot.) Return a pointer to the next slotdef with a different offset,
because that's convenient for fixup_slot_dispatchers(). */
/* Common code for update_slots_callback() and fixup_slot_dispatchers().
*
* This is meant to set a "slot" like type->tp_repr or
* type->tp_as_sequence->sq_concat by looking up special methods like
* __repr__ or __add__. The opposite (adding special methods from slots) is
* done by add_operators(), called from PyType_Ready(). Since update_one_slot()
* calls PyType_Ready() if needed, the special methods are already in place.
*
* The special methods corresponding to each slot are defined in the "slotdef"
* array. Note that one slot may correspond to multiple special methods and vice
* versa. For example, tp_richcompare uses 6 methods __lt__, ..., __ge__ and
* tp_as_number->nb_add uses __add__ and __radd__. In the other direction,
* __add__ is used by the number and sequence protocols and __getitem__ by the
* sequence and mapping protocols. This causes a lot of complications.
*
* In detail, update_one_slot() does the following:
*
* First of all, if the slot in question does not exist, return immediately.
* This can happen for example if it's tp_as_number->nb_add but tp_as_number
* is NULL.
*
* For the given slot, we loop over all the special methods with a name
* corresponding to that slot (for example, for tp_descr_set, this would be
* __set__ and __delete__) and we look up these names in the MRO of the type.
* If we don't find any special method, the slot is set to NULL (regardless of
* what was in the slot before).
*
* Suppose that we find exactly one special method. If it's a wrapper_descriptor
* (i.e. a special method calling a slot, for example str.__repr__ which calls
* the tp_repr for the 'str' class) with the correct name ("__repr__" for
* tp_repr), for the right class, calling the right wrapper C function (like
* wrap_unaryfunc for tp_repr), then the slot is set to the slot that the
* wrapper_descriptor originally wrapped. For example, a class inheriting
* from 'str' and not redefining __repr__ will have tp_repr set to the tp_repr
* of 'str'.
* In all other cases where the special method exists, the slot is set to a
* wrapper calling the special method. There is one exception: if the special
* method is a wrapper_descriptor with the correct name but the type has
* precisely one slot set for that name and that slot is not the one that we
* are updating, then NULL is put in the slot (this exception is the only place
* in update_one_slot() where the *existing* slots matter).
*
* When there are multiple special methods for the same slot, the above is
* applied for each special method. As long as the results agree, the common
* resulting slot is applied. If the results disagree, then a wrapper for
* the special methods is installed. This is always safe, but less efficient
* because it uses method lookup instead of direct C calls.
*
* There are some further special cases for specific slots, like supporting
* __hash__ = None for tp_hash and special code for tp_new.
*
* When done, return a pointer to the next slotdef with a different offset,
* because that's convenient for fixup_slot_dispatchers(). This function never
* sets an exception: if an internal error happens (unlikely), it's ignored. */
static slotdef *
update_one_slot(PyTypeObject *type, slotdef *p)
{
@ -7241,7 +7291,7 @@ update_one_slot(PyTypeObject *type, slotdef *p)
descr = find_name_in_mro(type, p->name_strobj, &error);
if (descr == NULL) {
if (error == -1) {
/* It is unlikely by not impossible that there has been an exception
/* It is unlikely but not impossible that there has been an exception
during lookup. Since this function originally expected no errors,
we ignore them here in order to keep up the interface. */
PyErr_Clear();