Eliminate extra blank line in shell output. Caused by stdout not being
flushed
upon completion of subprocess' Executive.runcode() when user code ends by
outputting an unterminated line, e.g. print "test",
[ 555817 ] Flawed fcntl.ioctl implementation.
with my patch that allows for an array to be mutated when passed
as the buffer argument to ioctl() (details complicated by
backwards compatibility considerations -- read the docs!).
assertRaises. Fixed a repeated subtle bug in the inplace tests by
removing the possibilty that a self.fail() call could raise a
TypeError that the test catches by mistake.
Allow mixed-type __eq__ and __ne__ for Set objects. This is messier than
I'd like because Set *also* implements __cmp__. I know of one glitch now:
cmp(s, t) returns 0 now when s and t are both Sets and s == t, despite
that Set.__cmp__ unconditionally raises TypeError (and by intent). The
rub is that __eq__ gets tried first, and the x.__eq__(y) True result
convinces Python that cmp(x, y) is 0 without even calling Set.__cmp__.
rarely needed, but can sometimes be useful to release objects
referenced by the traceback held in sys.exc_info()[2]. (SF patch
#693195.) Thanks to Kevin Jacobs!
M run.py
Move exception formatting out of rpc.py. This allows each end of the
link to format and print exceptions how and where it sees fit and makes it
easier for threads to display their own exceptions.
* Changed variable name from 'list' to 'flist'.
* Replaced "while 1" with "while True".
* Replaced if/elif/elif/elif structure with a shorter and
faster dispatch dictionary that maps attrs to methods.
* Simplified and sped comparison logic by using
ifilter, ifilterfalse, and dict.fromkeys.
* Used True and False rather than 1 and 0.
* Replaced "while 1" with "while True"
* Rewrote read() and readline() for clarity and speed.
* Replaced variable 'list' with 'hlist'
* Used augmented assignment in two places.
specified with an absolute path, the object file is also
written to an absolute path. The patch drops the drive and
leading '/' from the source path, so a path like /path/to/foo.c
results in an object file like build/temp.i686linux/path/to/foo.o.
create a temporary file. This fixes#688011.
Got rid of the install() method in macresource, and replaced it with
a resource_filename() method which will optionally decode a given resourcefile
(which may be applesingle-encoded) and return the real resourcefile.
Use this new method in buildtools to copy the correct resource file to
the bundle. This fixes#688007.
- Replaced bootstrap shell script with Python script. This means
standalone apps built with bundlebuilder will not work on MacOS < 10.1,
since we depend (again) on an installed Python.
- Add a hack to set sys.executable; the bootstrap script does os.execve()
with an argv[0] that's different from the actual Python executable
(it has to match the CFBundleExecutable entry in the Info.plist to make
the app work both from the Finder and the command line, and it has to be
the bootstrap script), yet a proper sys.executable is needed to spawn
auxiliary processes.
The problem is in sre_compile.py: the call to
_compile_charset near the end of _compile_info forgets to
pass in the flags, so that the info charset is not compiled
with re.U. (The info charset is used when searching to find
the first character at which a match could start; it is not
generated for patterns beginning with a repeat like '\w{1}'.)
test_nonrecursive_deep(): Reduced nesting depth to 60.
Not a bugfix candidate. 2.3 increased the number of stack frames
needed to pickle a list (in order to get implement the "list
batching" unpickling memory optimization new in 2.3).
between str, unicode, UserString and the string module
as possible. This increases code coverage in stringobject.c
from 83% to 86% and should help keep the string classes
in sync in the future. From SF patch #662807
time.sleep(1) sometimes delays for fractionally less than a second
resulting in too short of an interval for C's time.time() function
to create a distinct seed.
prior to NT. EMX has a number of Posix emulation routines, including
geteuid() but lacks chown(), so silently skip trying to actually set
a file ownership when extracting a file from a tar archive.
There are some problems with this module, but the tool works for
simple tasks and no one else has volunteered a better code coverage
tool. Should cleanup and document before the beta release.
M PyShell.py
M ScriptBinding.py
M rpc.py
M run.py
Clean up the way IDLEfork handles termination of the subprocess, restore
ability to interrupt user code in Windows (so long as it's doing terminal
I/O).
1. Handle subprocess interrupts in Windows with an RPC message.
2. Run/F5 will restart the subprocess even if user code is running.
3. Restart the subprocess if the link is dropped.
4. Exit IDLE cleanly even during I/O.
4. In rpc.py, remove explicit calls to statelock, let the condition
variable handle acquire() and release().
Fix off-by-1 error in normalize_line_endings():
when *p == '\0' the NUL was copied into q and q was auto-incremented,
the loop was broken out of,
then a newline was appended followed by a NUL.
So the function, in effect, was strcpy() but added two extra chars
which was caught by obmalloc in debug mode, since there was only
room for 1 additional newline.
Get test working under regrtest (added test_main).
- 'os2' references in ntpath.py relate to the VACPP port, not the EMX port;
- the VACPP port uses the same defpath as all other ntpath.py supported
platforms except 'ce'.
the optional proto 2 slot state.
pickle.py, load_build(): CAUTION: Noted that cPickle's
load_build and pickle's load_build really don't do the same
things with the state, and didn't before this patch either.
cPickle never tries to do .update(), and has no backoff if
instance.__dict__ can't be retrieved. There are no tests
that can tell the difference, and part of what cPickle's
load_build() did looked accidental to me, so I don't know
what the true intent is here.
pickletester.py, test_pickle.py: Got rid of the hack for
exempting cPickle from running some of the proto 2 tests.
dictobject.c, PyDict_Next(): documented intended use.
test_linuxaudiodev.py) are no longer run by default. This is
because they don't always work, depending on your hardware and
software. To run these tests, you must use an invocation like
./python Lib/test/regrtest.py -u audio test_ossaudiodev
with an indented code block but no newline would raise SyntaxError.
This would have been a four-line change in parsetok.c... Except
codeop.py depends on this behavior, so a compilation flag had to be
invented that causes the tokenizer to revert to the old behavior;
this required extra changes to 2 .h files, 2 .c files, and 2 .py
files. (Fixes SF bug #501622.)
and loading them via the other, except for the special cases of this
Guido added to test_datetime.py for datetime module objects. The new
test_xpickle.py tries all of pickletester's AbstractPickleTests in
both x-module ways.
This changes the default __new__ to refuse arguments iff tp_init is the
default __init__ implementation -- thus making it a TypeError when you
try to pass arguments to a constructor if the class doesn't override at
least __init__ or __new__.
"Unsigned" (i.e., positive-looking, but really negative) hex/oct
constants with a leading minus sign are once again properly negated.
The micro-optimization for negated numeric constants did the wrong
thing for such hex/oct constants. The patch avoids the optimization
for all hex/oct constants.
This needs to be backported to Python 2.2!
- Catch stderr as well as stdout
- Fixed a bug with non-installable packages
- Parse .pth files after installing, so you don't have to restart Python (or
the IDE) after installing.
descr_check(); it wasn't useful. Change the type argument of the
various _get() methods to PyObject * because the call signature of
tp_descr_get doesn't guarantee its type.
object is not a real str or unicode but an instance
of a subclass, construct the output via looping
over __getitem__. This guarantees that the result
is the same for function==None and function==lambda x:x
This doesn't happen for tuples, because filtertuple()
uses PyTuple_GetItem().
(This was discussed on SF bug #665835).
* Removed the ifilter flag wart by splitting it into two simpler functions.
* Fixed comment tabbing in C code.
* Factored module start-up code into a loop.
Documentation:
* Re-wrote introduction.
* Addede examples for quantifiers.
* Simplified python equivalent for islice().
* Documented split of ifilter().
Sets.py:
* Replace old ifilter() usage with new.
tickle the 2.2.2 __cmp__ bug test_datetime used to tickle, so the
workarounds for that bug no longer make sense in the test suite (which I'm
still trying to keep as closely in synch as possible with Zope3's
version).
__ne__ no longer complain if they don't know how to compare to the other
thing. If no meaningful way to compare is known, saying "not equal" is
sensible. This allows things like
if adatetime in some_sequence:
and
somedict[adatetime] = whatever
to work as expected even if some_sequence contains non-datetime objects,
or somedict non-datetime keys, because they only call __eq__.
It still complains (raises TypeError) for mixed-type comparisons in
contexts that require a total ordering, such as list.sort(), use as a
key in a BTree-based data structure, and cmp().
the tests will remain in sync:
"""
Tres discovered a weird bug when a datetime is pickled, caused by the
shadowing of __year, __month, __day and the use of proxies.
Here's a quick fix and a quick unit test. I don't quite understand
why this wasn't caught by the pickling unit tests.
"""
atomically, but deepcopy() didn't support this at all.
I don't see any reason for this, so I'm adding ClassType
to the set of types that are deep-copied atomically.
eventProc (which simply drops all events on the floor). Also added a
method SetDefaultEventProc through which frameworks can set a global
event handler (which can still be overridden on a per-call basis
with the eventProc argument).
* Fixed typo in exception message for times()
* Filled in missing times_traverse()
* Document reasons that imap() did not adopt a None fill-in feature
* Document that count(sys.maxint) will wrap-around on overflow
* Add overflow test to islice()
* Check that starmap()'s argument returns a tuple
* Verify that imap()'s tuple re-use is safe
* Make a similar tuple re-use (with safety check) for izip()
Reverting one of those irritating "security fixes". fdopen() opens
files in binary mode. That makes pydoc skip the \r\n on Windows that's
need to make the output readable in the shell. Screw it.
Simply replace all uses of statcache with os.stat.
Should I add a DeprecationWarning triggered if the use_statcache argument
is supplied, so we can remove it in 2.4?
Right now the test cases create a files and a directory in the temp.
directory. Raymond suggested checking files in to the test/ directory,
simplifying the setup/teardown methods; is that worth doing?
Apparently MAC OS 9 doesn't have POSIX-conforming timestamps. A test
fails as a result, but at least for this specific test it's easy enough
to get the POSIX epoch out of it.
This patch adds stdin, stdout as optional arguments to the cmd.Cmd
constructor (defaulting to sys.stdin, sys.stdout), and changes the Cmd
methods throughout to use self.stdout.write() and self.stdin.foo for
output and input. This allows much greater flexibility for using cmd -
for instance, hooking it into a telnet server.
Patch for library module and for documentation.
gzip shouldn't raise ValueError on corrupt files
Currently the gzip module will raise a ValueError if the file was
corrupt (bad crc or bad size). I can't see how that applies to
reading a corrupt file. IOError seems better, and it's what code
will likely be looking for.