Commit Graph

831 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters 0e871188e8 _PyObject_DebugDumpStats: renamed to _PyObject_DebugMallocStats.
Added code to call this when PYMALLOC_DEBUG is enabled, and envar
PYTHONMALLOCSTATS is set, whenever a new arena is obtained and once
late in the Python shutdown process.
2002-04-13 08:29:14 +00:00
Tim Peters af3e8de580 First stab at rationalizing the PyMem_ API. Mixing PyObject_xyz with
PyMem_{Del, DEL} doesn't work yet (compilation problems).

pyport.h:  _PyMem_EXTRA is gone.

pmem.h:  Repaired comments.  PyMem_{Malloc, MALLOC} and
PyMem_{Realloc, REALLOC} now make the same x-platform guarantees when
asking for 0 bytes, and when passing a NULL pointer to the latter.

object.c:  PyMem_{Malloc, Realloc} just call their macro versions
now, since the latter take care of the x-platform 0 and NULL stuff
by themselves now.

pypcre.c, grow_stack():  So sue me.  On two lines, this called
PyMem_RESIZE to grow a "const" area.  It's not legit to realloc a
const area, so the compiler warned given the new expansion of
PyMem_RESIZE.  It would have gotten the same warning before if it
had used PyMem_Resize() instead; the older macro version, but not the
function version, silently cast away the constness.  IMO that was a wrong
thing to do, and the docs say the macro versions of PyMem_xyz are
deprecated anyway.  If somebody else is resizing const areas with the
macro spelling, they'll get a warning when they recompile now too.
2002-04-12 07:22:56 +00:00
Tim Peters e9e7452505 First cut at repairing out-of-date comments; make alignment of macro defs
all the same within the #ifdef WITH_PYMALLOC block.
2002-04-12 05:21:34 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 20d0a1a071 Remove PyMalloc_* symbols. PyObject_Malloc now uses pymalloc if
it's enabled.
2002-04-12 02:39:18 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 3e7b893899 Remove PyMalloc_* symbols. PyObject_Malloc now uses pymalloc if
it's enabled.

Allow PyObject_Del, PyObject_Free, and PyObject_GC_Del to be used as
function designators.  Provide source compatibility macros.

Make PyObject_GC_Track and PyObject_GC_UnTrack functions instead of
trivial macros wrapping functions.
2002-04-12 02:38:45 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer f6d1ea1749 Change the type of the tp_free from 'destructor' to 'freefunc'. 2002-04-12 01:57:06 +00:00
Tim Peters 2bbdba3c00 Removed more hair in support of future-generator stmts. 2002-04-12 01:20:10 +00:00
Jack Jansen 8ab04b4d65 Got rid of ifdefs for long-obsolete GUSI versions. 2002-04-11 20:46:23 +00:00
Jack Jansen 9b745f6665 Get rid of USE_CACHE_ALIGNED. It has no function anymore. 2002-04-11 20:41:18 +00:00
Mark Hammond 303d05d317 Add standard header preamble and footer, a-la intobject.h. Main purpose is extern "C" for C++ programs. 2002-04-06 03:58:41 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2e1c09c1fd Removed old Digital Creations copyright/license notices (with
permission from Paul Everitt).  Also removed a few other references to
Digital Creations and changed the remaining ones to Zope Corporation.
2002-04-04 17:52:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5f8203679d Oops. Here are the new files. My apologies. 2002-04-03 23:01:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 77f6a65eb0 Add the 'bool' type and its values 'False' and 'True', as described in
PEP 285.  Everything described in the PEP is here, and there is even
some documentation.  I had to fix 12 unit tests; all but one of these
were printing Boolean outcomes that changed from 0/1 to False/True.
(The exception is test_unicode.py, which did a type(x) == type(y)
style comparison.  I could've fixed that with a single line using
issubtype(x, type(y)), but instead chose to be explicit about those
places where a bool is expected.

Still to do: perhaps more documentation; change standard library
modules to return False/True from predicates.
2002-04-03 22:41:51 +00:00
Tim Peters 7ccfadf3a8 New PYMALLOC_DEBUG function void _PyMalloc_DebugDumpStats(void).
This displays stats about the # of arenas, pools, blocks and bytes, to
stderr, both used and reserved but unused.

CAUTION:  Because PYMALLOC_DEBUG is on, the debug malloc routine adds
16 bytes to each request.  This makes each block appear two size classes
higher than it would be if PYMALLOC_DEBUG weren't on.

So far, playing with this confirms the obvious:  there's a lot of activity
in the "small dict" size class, but nothing in the core makes any use of
the 8-byte or 16-byte classes.
2002-04-01 06:04:21 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 522cf1f6fb Patch #536908: Add missing #include guards/extern "C". 2002-03-30 08:57:12 +00:00
Tim Peters 1f7df3595a Remove the CACHE_HASH and INTERN_STRINGS preprocessor symbols. 2002-03-29 03:29:08 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer ef99723b66 Add _Py_AS_GC macro. It will be used by the trashcan code on object.c. 2002-03-28 21:06:16 +00:00
Tim Peters d1139e043c PYMALLOC_DEBUG routines: The "check API family" gimmick was going nowhere
fast, and just cluttered the code.  Get rid of it for now.  If a compelling
case can be made for it, easy to restore it later.
2002-03-28 07:32:11 +00:00
Fred Drake 7bf9715a8b Introduce two new flag bits that can be set in a PyMethodDef method
descriptor, as used for the tp_methods slot of a type.  These new flag
bits are both optional, and mutually exclusive.  Most methods will not
use either.  These flags are used to create special method types which
exist in the same namespace as normal methods without having to use
tedious construction code to insert the new special method objects in
the type's tp_dict after PyType_Ready() has been called.

If METH_CLASS is specified, the method will represent a class method
like that returned by the classmethod() built-in.

If METH_STATIC is specified, the method will represent a static method
like that returned by the staticmethod() built-in.

These flags may not be used in the PyMethodDef table for modules since
these special method types are not meaningful in that case; a
ValueError will be raised if these flags are found in that context.
2002-03-28 05:33:33 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 1543c07fdf Add a comment that PyArg_GetInt is deprecated and should not be used 2002-03-25 22:21:58 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 3a6f97850b Remove many uses of PyArg_NoArgs macro, change METH_OLDARGS to METH_NOARGS. 2002-03-25 20:46:46 +00:00
Tim Peters ddea208be9 Give Python a debug-mode pymalloc, much as sketched on Python-Dev.
When WITH_PYMALLOC is defined, define PYMALLOC_DEBUG to enable the debug
allocator.  This can be done independent of build type (release or debug).
A debug build automatically defines PYMALLOC_DEBUG when pymalloc is
enabled.  It's a detected error to define PYMALLOC_DEBUG when pymalloc
isn't enabled.

Two debugging entry points defined only under PYMALLOC_DEBUG:

+ _PyMalloc_DebugCheckAddress(const void *p) can be used (e.g., from gdb)
  to sanity-check a memory block obtained from pymalloc.  It sprays
  info to stderr (see next) and dies via Py_FatalError if the block is
  detectably damaged.

+ _PyMalloc_DebugDumpAddress(const void *p) can be used to spray info
  about a debug memory block to stderr.

A tiny start at implementing "API family" checks isn't good for
anything yet.

_PyMalloc_DebugRealloc() has been optimized to do little when the new
size is <= old size.  However, if the new size is larger, it really
can't call the underlying realloc() routine without either violating its
contract, or knowing something non-trivial about how the underlying
realloc() works.  A memcpy is always done in this case.

This was a disaster for (and only) one of the std tests:  test_bufio
creates single text file lines up to a million characters long.  On
Windows, fileobject.c's get_line() uses the horridly funky
getline_via_fgets(), which keeps growing and growing a string object
hoping to find a newline.  It grew the string object 1000 bytes each
time, so for a million-character string it took approximately forever
(I gave up after a few minutes).

So, also:

fileobject.c, getline_via_fgets():  When a single line is outrageously
long, grow the string object at a mildly exponential rate, instead of
just 1000 bytes at a time.

That's enough so that a debug-build test_bufio finishes in about 5 seconds
on my Win98SE box.  I'm curious to try this on Win2K, because it has very
different memory behavior than Win9X, and test_bufio always took a factor
of 10 longer to complete on Win2K.  It *could* be that the endless
reallocs were simply killing it on Win2K even in the release build.
2002-03-23 10:03:50 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer c24ea08644 Disable the parser hacks that enabled the "yield" keyword using a future
statement.
2002-03-22 23:53:36 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer ffd5399728 Make PyObject_{NEW,New,Del,DEL} always use the standard malloc (PyMem_*)
and not pymalloc.  Add the functions PyMalloc_New, PyMalloc_NewVar, and
PyMalloc_Del that will use pymalloc if it's enabled.   If pymalloc is
not enabled then they use the standard malloc (PyMem_*).
2002-03-22 15:25:18 +00:00
Tim Peters fbb556df15 Arrange to export the _PyMalloc_{Malloc, Realloc, Free} entry points. On
Windows some modules are considered (by me, and I don't care what anyone
else thinks about this <wink>) to be part of "the core" despite that they
happen to be compiled into separate DLLs (the "to DLL or not to DLL?"
question on Windows is nearly arbitrary).  Making the pymalloc entry
points available to them allows the Windows build to complete without
incident when WITH_PYMALLOC is #define'd.

Note that this isn't unprecedented.  Other "private API" functions we
export include _PySequence_IterSearch, _PyEval_SliceIndex, _PyCodec_Lookup,
_Py_ZeroStruct, _Py_TrueStruct, _PyLong_New and _PyModule_Clear.
2002-03-20 04:02:31 +00:00
Andrew M. Kuchling 913b9078cf [Bug #528914] PyTraceBack_Store/Fetch were deleted in 1997, but their
prototypes remain.  Noted by Yakov Markovitch.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-03-19 16:02:35 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 25f3dc21b5 Drop the PyCore_* memory API. 2002-03-18 21:06:21 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 11f5be8d88 Simpilify PyCore_* macros by assuming the function prototypes for
malloc() and free() don't change.
2002-03-18 18:13:41 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis f6eebbb435 Patch #530105: Allow file object may to be subtyped 2002-03-15 17:42:16 +00:00
Tim Peters dc5a508761 SF bug 525705: [2.2] underflow raise OverflowException.
Another year in the quest to out-guess random C behavior.

Added macros Py_ADJUST_ERANGE1(X) and Py_ADJUST_ERANGE2(X, Y).  The latter
is useful for functions with complex results.  Two corrections to errno-
after-libm-call are attempted:

1. If the platform set errno to ERANGE due to underflow, clear errno.
   Some unknown subset of libm versions and link options do this.  It's
   allowed by C89, but I never figured anyone would do it.

2. If the platform did not set errno but overflow occurred, force
   errno to ERANGE.  C89 required setting errno to ERANGE, but C99
   doesn't.  Some unknown subset of libm versions and link options do
   it the C99 way now.

Bugfix candidate, but hold off until some Linux people actually try it,
with and without -lieee.  I'll send a help plea to Python-Dev.
2002-03-09 04:58:24 +00:00
Tim Peters a5d78cc208 Whether platform malloc(0) returns NULL has nothing to do with whether
platform realloc(p, 0) returns NULL, so MALLOC_ZERO_RETURNS_NULL can
be correctly undefined yet realloc(p, 0) can return NULL anyway.

Prevent realloc(p, 0) doing free(p) and returning NULL via a different
hack.  Would probably be better to get rid of MALLOC_ZERO_RETURNS_NULL
entirely.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-03-02 08:43:19 +00:00
Tim Peters 03b18834c3 For clarity, change _longobject to build directly from PyObject_VAR_HEAD
instead of faking it by hand.  It *is* a var object, and nothing but
hysterical raisins to pretend it's an oddball.
2002-03-02 04:33:09 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 31e233aa7a Cells are not VAR objects.
Noted by Jason Orendorff, SF #520768.

Bug fix candidate for 2.1 & 2.2.
2002-02-28 23:46:34 +00:00
Tim Peters 5e67cded40 PyGC_Head: Use "long double" instead of "double" as the worst-case
alignment gimmick.  David Abrahams notes that the standard "long double"
actually requires stricter alignment than "double" on some Tru64 box.
On my box and yours <wink>, it's the same, so no harm done on most
boxes.
2002-02-28 19:38:51 +00:00
Andrew MacIntyre 5e090fc985 OS/2 EMX port changes (Include part of patch #450267):
Include/
    osdefs.h  // EMX promotes Un*x path separators
    pyport.h
2002-02-26 11:20:01 +00:00
Tim Peters 2cec3542c7 Change the version string from "2.2+" to "2.3a0". disutils peels off
the first 3 characters of this string in several places, so for as long
as they remain "2.2" it confuses the heck out of attempts to build 2.3
stuff using distutils.
2002-02-02 00:08:15 +00:00
Jack Jansen 4892f2406f Got rid of a few more NeXT ifdefs. The last, I think. 2002-02-01 15:46:29 +00:00
Fred Drake 7bb1c9a11d Remove the unused & broken PyThread_*_sema() functions and related constants.
This closes SF patch #504215.
2002-01-19 22:02:55 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis c0e1671c71 Patch #477752: Drop old-style getargs from curses. 2002-01-17 23:08:27 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis cdc4451222 Include <unistd.h> in Python.h. Fixes #500924. 2002-01-12 11:05:12 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis b0d71d0ec6 Implement PyObject_DelItemString. Fixes #498915. 2002-01-05 10:50:30 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 7198a525f3 Patch #494783: Rename cmp_op enumerators. 2002-01-01 19:59:11 +00:00
Tim Peters 10a3bb53a8 SF bug #495548: troublesome #define in pyport.h
Removed the ancient "#define ANY void".

Bugfix candidate?  Hard call.  The bug report claims the existence of
this #define creates conflicts with other packages, which is easy to
believe.  OTOH, some extension authors may still be relying on its
presence.  I'm afraid you can't win on this one.
2001-12-25 19:07:38 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 99ffed8793 And we start all over again! 2001-12-21 20:05:33 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 19554f60c2 As usual, bump the version number. 2001-12-14 20:30:23 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 12ce485b48 Add helper macro to get the number of free variables for a PyCodeObject. 2001-12-13 19:47:02 +00:00
Tim Peters f582b82fe9 SF bug #491415 PyDict_UpdateFromSeq2() unused
PyDict_UpdateFromSeq2():  removed it.
PyDict_MergeFromSeq2():  made it public and documented it.
PyDict_Merge() docs:  updated to reveal <wink> that the second
argument can be any mapping object.
2001-12-11 18:51:08 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 146483964e Patch supplied by Burton Radons for his own SF bug #487390: Modifying
type.__module__ behavior.

This adds the module name and a dot in front of the type name in every
type object initializer, except for built-in types (and those that
already had this).  Note that it touches lots of Mac modules -- I have
no way to test these but the changes look right.  Apologies if they're
not.  This also touches the weakref docs, which contains a sample type
object initializer.  It also touches the mmap test output, because the
mmap type's repr is included in that output.  It touches object.h to
put the correct description in a comment.
2001-12-08 18:02:58 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 301d0f89bb PyMethodObject(): Update the comment about im_class based upon a
conversation with Robin Dunn in SF patch #490402.
2001-12-07 21:54:33 +00:00
Tim Peters 3caca2326e SF bug #488514: -Qnew needs work
Big Hammer to implement -Qnew as PEP 238 says it should work (a global
option affecting all instances of "/").

pydebug.h, main.c, pythonrun.c:  define a private _Py_QnewFlag flag, true
iff -Qnew is passed on the command line.  This should go away (as the
comments say) when true division becomes The Rule.  This is
deliberately not exposed to runtime inspection or modification:  it's
a one-way one-shot switch to pretend you're using Python 3.

ceval.c:  when _Py_QnewFlag is set, treat BINARY_DIVIDE as
BINARY_TRUE_DIVIDE.

test_{descr, generators, zipfile}.py:  fiddle so these pass under
-Qnew too.  This was just a matter of s!/!//! in test_generators and
test_zipfile.  test_descr was trickier, as testbinop() is passed
assumptions that "/" is the same as calling a "__div__" method; put
a temporary hack there to call "__truediv__" instead when the method
name is "__div__" and 1/2 evaluates to 0.5.

Three standard tests still fail under -Qnew (on Windows; somebody
please try the Linux tests with -Qnew too!  Linux runs a whole bunch
of tests Windows doesn't):
    test_augassign
    test_class
    test_coercion
I can't stay awake longer to stare at this (be my guest).  Offhand
cures weren't obvious, nor was it even obvious that cures are possible
without major hackery.

Question:  when -Qnew is in effect, should calls to __div__ magically
change into calls to __truediv__?  See "major hackery" at tail end of
last paragraph <wink>.
2001-12-06 06:23:26 +00:00