It is possible but unlikely for the `python_tzpath_context` function to fail between the start of the `try` block and the point where `os.environ.get` succeeds, in which case `old_env` will be undefined. In this case, we want to take no action.
Practically speaking this will really only happen in an error condition anyway, so it doesn't really matter, but we should probably do it right anyway.
Add `MS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP`, `MS_WINDOWS_APPS`, `MS_WINDOWS_SYSTEM` and `MS_WINDOWS_GAMES` preprocessor definitions to allow switching off functionality missing from particular API partitions ("partitions" are used in Windows to identify overlapping subsets of APIs).
CPython only officially supports `MS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP` and `MS_WINDOWS_SYSTEM` (APPS is included by normal desktop builds, but APPS without DESKTOP is not covered). Other configurations are a convenience for people building their own runtimes.
`MS_WINDOWS_GAMES` is for the Xbox subset of the Windows API, which is also available on client OS, but is restricted compared to `MS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP`. These restrictions may change over time, as they relate to the build headers rather than the OS support, and so we assume that Xbox builds will use the latest available version of the GDK.
distutils was removed in November. However, the c-analyzer relies on it. To solve that here, we vendor the parts the tool needs so it can be run against 3.12+. (Also see gh-92584.)
Note that we may end up removing this code later in favor of a solution in common with the peg_generator tool (which also relies on distutils). At the least, the copy here makes sure the c-analyzer tool works on 3.12+ in the meantime.
Specific changes:
* move the import lock to PyInterpreterState
* move the "find_and_load" diagnostic state to PyInterpreterState
Note that the import lock exists to keep multiple imports of the same module in the same interpreter (but in different threads) from stomping on each other. Independently, we use a distinct global lock to protect globally shared import state, especially related to loaded extension modules. For now we can rely on the GIL as that lock but with a per-interpreter GIL we'll need a new global lock.
The remaining state in _PyRuntimeState.imports will (probably) continue being global.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/100227
Since Mercurial removal from bitbucket.org, some links are broken.
They are replaced by github.com or webarchive.org links if available. Otherwise, they are removed.
Co-authored-by: Shantanu <12621235+hauntsaninja@users.noreply.github.com>
Some incompatible changes had gone in, and the "ignore" lists weren't properly undated. This change fixes that. It's necessary prior to enabling test_check_c_globals, which I hope to do soon.
Note that this does include moving last_resort_memory_error to PyInterpreterState.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/90110
The previous `_parse_args()` method pulled the `_parts` out of any supplied `PurePath` objects; these were subsequently joined in `_from_parts()` using `os.path.join()`. This is actually a slower form of joining than calling `fspath()` on the path object, because it doesn't take advantage of the fact that the contents of `_parts` is normalized!
This reduces the time taken to run `PurePath("foo", "bar")` by ~20%, and the time taken to run `PurePath(p, "cheese")`, where `p = PurePath("/foo", "bar", "baz")`, by ~40%.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:AlexWaygood
As part of investigation issue https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/102433, I discovered what I believe to be an error where two classes `CI` and `DI` are not being used. The assertions beneath them act on `C` and `D`, duplicating existing assertions in this test.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:AlexWaygood