As of 529a160 (gh-118204), building with HAVE_DYNAMIC_LOADING stopped working. This is a minimal fix just to get builds working again. There are actually a number of long-standing deficiencies with HAVE_DYNAMIC_LOADING builds that need to be resolved separately.
* gh-122188: Move magic number to its own file
* Add versionadded directive
* Do work in C
* Integrate launcher.c
* Make _pyc_magic_number private
* Remove metadata
* Move sys.implementation -> _imp
* Modernize comment
* Move _RAW_MAGIC_NUMBER to the C side as well
* _pyc_magic_number -> pyc_magic_number
* Remove unused import
* Update docs
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Eric Snow <ericsnowcurrently@gmail.com>
* Fix typo in tests
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Co-authored-by: Eric Snow <ericsnowcurrently@gmail.com>
As noted in gh-117983, the import importlib.util can be triggered at
interpreter startup under some circumstances, so adding threading makes
it a potentially obligatory load.
Lazy loading is not used in the stdlib, so this removes an unnecessary
load for the majority of users and slightly increases the cost of the
first lazily loaded module.
An obligatory threading load breaks gevent, which monkeypatches the
stdlib. Although unsupported, there doesn't seem to be an offsetting
benefit to breaking their use case.
For reference, here are benchmarks for the current main branch:
```
❯ hyperfine -w 8 './python -c "import importlib.util"'
Benchmark 1: ./python -c "import importlib.util"
Time (mean ± σ): 9.7 ms ± 0.7 ms [User: 7.7 ms, System: 1.8 ms]
Range (min … max): 8.4 ms … 13.1 ms 313 runs
```
And with this patch:
```
❯ hyperfine -w 8 './python -c "import importlib.util"'
Benchmark 1: ./python -c "import importlib.util"
Time (mean ± σ): 8.4 ms ± 0.7 ms [User: 6.8 ms, System: 1.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 7.2 ms … 11.7 ms 352 runs
```
Compare to:
```
❯ hyperfine -w 8 './python -c pass'
Benchmark 1: ./python -c pass
Time (mean ± σ): 7.6 ms ± 0.6 ms [User: 5.9 ms, System: 1.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 6.7 ms … 11.3 ms 390 runs
```
This roughly halves the import time of importlib.util.
Add __all__ to the following modules:
importlib.machinery, importlib.util and xml.sax.
Add also "# noqa: F401" in collections.abc,
subprocess and xml.sax.
* Sort __all__; remove collections.abc.__all__; remove private names
* Add tests
The PEP 649 implementation will require a way to load NotImplementedError
from the bytecode. @markshannon suggested implementing this by converting
LOAD_ASSERTION_ERROR into a more general mechanism for loading constants.
This PR adds this new opcode. I will work on the rest of the implementation
of the PEP separately.
Co-authored-by: Irit Katriel <1055913+iritkatriel@users.noreply.github.com>
* Reads zip64 files as produced by the zipfile module
* Include tests (somewhat slow, however, because of the need to create "large" zips)
* About the same amount of strictness reading invalid zip files as zipfile has
* Still works on files with prepended data (like pex)
There are a lot more test cases at https://github.com/thatch/zipimport64/ that give me confidence that this works for real-world files.
Fixes#89739 and #77140.
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Co-authored-by: Itamar Ostricher <itamarost@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Setting the __class__ attribute of a lazy-loading module to ModuleType enables other threads to attempt to access attributes before the loading is complete. Now that is protected by a lock.
My criterion for delayed imports is that they're only worth it if the
majority of users of the module would benefit from it, otherwise you're
just moving latency around unpredictably.
mktime_tz is not used anywhere in the standard library and grep.app
indicates it's not got much use in the ecosystem either.
Distribution.files is not nearly as widely used as other
importlib.metadata APIs, so we defer the csv import.
Before:
```
λ hyperfine -w 8 './python -c "import importlib.metadata"'
Benchmark 1: ./python -c "import importlib.metadata"
Time (mean ± σ): 65.1 ms ± 0.5 ms [User: 55.3 ms, System: 9.8 ms]
Range (min … max): 64.4 ms … 66.4 ms 44 runs
```
After:
```
λ hyperfine -w 8 './python -c "import importlib.metadata"'
Benchmark 1: ./python -c "import importlib.metadata"
Time (mean ± σ): 62.0 ms ± 0.3 ms [User: 52.5 ms, System: 9.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 61.3 ms … 62.8 ms 46 runs
```
for about a 3ms saving with warm disk cache, maybe 7-11ms with cold disk
cache.
* Sync with importlib_metadata 7.0.0
* Add blurb
* Update docs to reflect changes.
* Link datamodel docs for object.__getitem__
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
* Add what's new for removed __getattr__
* Link datamodel docs for object.__getitem__
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
* Add exclamation point, as that seems to be used for other classes.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
This adds a 16-bit inline cache entry to the conditional branch instructions POP_JUMP_IF_{FALSE,TRUE,NONE,NOT_NONE} and their instrumented variants, which is used to keep track of the branch direction.
Each time we encounter these instructions we shift the cache entry left by one and set the bottom bit to whether we jumped.
Then when it's time to translate such a branch to Tier 2 uops, we use the bit count from the cache entry to decided whether to continue translating the "didn't jump" branch or the "jumped" branch.
The counter is initialized to a pattern of alternating ones and zeros to avoid bias.
The .pyc file magic number is updated. There's a new test, some fixes for existing tests, and a few miscellaneous cleanups.